University Foundation Arts Building - 1664 N. Virginia Street
Ayana V. Jackson, on view from January 27 through May 23, 2026, brings together a decade of work by an artist who has consistently interrogated the foundations of photographic history. Born in 1977 in East Orange, New Jersey, and living between Brooklyn and Johannesburg, Ayana V. Jackson examines how Black women’s bodies have been framed, classified, and circulated across the African diaspora. Through carefully staged self-portraiture and archival research, she reconsiders the authority long granted to the photographic image.
Drawing from nineteenth- and early twentieth-century colonial archives, European modernist aesthetics, and ethnographic portraiture, Jackson reconstructs visual languages that once claimed objectivity. She often casts herself in the role of historical figures, inhabiting poses and settings that echo imperial imagery. In doing so, she exposes the mechanisms through which photography helped codify racial hierarchies. Her images do not simply critique; they re-stage and re-author, transforming documents of domination into sites of resistance and agency.
Across series produced between 2013 and 2023, Jackson moves fluidly between themes of flight and stillness, spectacle and interiority. References to Black equestrian histories, myths of the diaspora, and modernist composition intertwine. The body becomes both archive and instrument—at times defiant, at times contemplative. Questions of authorship, authenticity, and power surface repeatedly, inviting viewers to consider the ethical relationship between photographer, subject, and audience.
Jackson’s work has entered major public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts Boston and the National Gallery of Victoria, reflecting its international resonance. In 2023, her exhibition
From the Deep: In the Wake of Drexciya opened at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, marking a significant institutional milestone. Beyond her studio practice, Jackson founded STILL Art in Johannesburg, an artist residency dedicated to supporting emerging voices in Southern Africa. This exhibition offers a sustained encounter with an artist who insists that revisiting the past is not an act of nostalgia, but a necessary step toward reshaping the visual narratives that inform the present.
Image:
Ayana V. Jackson, Mary Fields: With a jug of Whiskey by her Foot, a pistol packed Under her apron, and a shotgun by her side, 2023, courtesy of Mariane Ibrahim Gallery. © Ayana V. Jackson