Willie Cole is a contemporary American sculptor, printer, and conceptual and visual artist. His work uses contexts of postmodern eclecticism, and combines references and appropriation from African and African-American imagery. He also has used Dada’s readymades and Surrealism’s transformed objects, as well as icons of American pop culture or African and Asian masks.
Willie Cole
Schwinn tji-wara (2002) at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC
Before Yesterday We Could Fly
Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room is an art exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The exhibit, which opened on November 5, 2021, uses a period room format of installation to envision the past, present, and future home of someone who lived in Seneca Village, a largely African American settlement which was destroyed to make way for the construction of Central Park in the mid-1800s.
Met Afrofuturist period room, December 2021
A rubber hair comb in the exhibit, evoking another comb uncovered during the Seneca Village Project.
The exhibit as viewed from the "living room" side
Vernus 3 by Ini Archibong in Before Yesterday We Could Fly