Christian-Green Gallery - 201 East 21st St. - 2nd Floor of Jester Center A232
Carrie Mae Weems: Something Grander Still is presented at the Art Galleries at Black Studies at the University of Texas at Austin from January 30 through May 9, 2026. Centered in the Christian-Green Gallery, the exhibition revisits
Family Pictures and Stories (1978–84), the foundational body of work through which
Carrie Mae Weems first articulated her enduring concerns with self-definition, memory, and power. Drawn from photographs, text, and audio rooted in her own family archive, the installation traces how these early images continue to inform her evolving practice. The title, borrowed from Weems’s 1984 artist statement, underscores her conviction that understanding how we construct personal history is itself a profound creative act.
Rather than staging a retrospective, the exhibition follows the afterlives of these pictures across decades of artistic and intellectual exchange. Family photographs—among them the tintype of her maternal grandfather—appear not as static relics but as active agents in an ongoing inquiry. Weems’s work moves between intimacy and structural critique, linking domestic interiors to broader histories of race, labor, and representation in the United States. Through careful sequencing of image and text, she reveals how personal narrative intersects with institutional power, insisting that private memory carries public consequence.
A complementary study room in the Idea Lab expands this dialogue, situating Weems within conversations among Black photographers, feminist thinkers, and media activists of the 1980s and early 1990s. Works by contemporaries who challenged dominant visual paradigms appear alongside publications and archival materials, illuminating the cultural landscape in which her practice took shape. Photography and video emerge here as tools of resistance—means of countering erasure and reframing visibility.
Across more than four decades, Weems has built a multidisciplinary oeuvre spanning photography, installation, and film, earning recognition from institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum. Yet
Something Grander Still emphasizes process over accolade. By returning deliberately to formative material, the exhibition proposes revisitation as method: a way to deepen research, refine questions, and claim authority over one’s own story. In doing so, it affirms the enduring power of images to shape how history is known—and who has the right to tell it.
Image:
Carrie Mae Weems, Van and Vera with kids in the kitchen, from Family Pictures and Stories, 1978-84. Gelatin silver print, size variable. Courtesy the artist and Gladstone Gallery © Carrie Mae Weems