Focusing initially on artists of African, Asian and Latin American descent, the Bronx Museum Permanent Collection was created in 1986 with the goal to reflect the borough's dynamic communities. Beyond The Veil focuses on an eclectic group of contemporary artists in the Permanent Collection whose works convey the complex mediation between the self and the other, between one’s allegiance to tradition and the appeal of globalism.
“It is a peculiar sensation,” wrote W.E.B. Du Bois, “this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others.” Although Du Bois (1868-1963) was clearly addressing the plight of African Americans in post-slavery society, his ideas about otherness gain renewed urgency in our era, marked by massive migration and ethnic strife. Indeed, and most remarkably, the artists featured in Beyond the Veil have opted to portray themselves on their own terms, bringing distinct senses of history onto the broader cultural debate. The exhibition also features a new series of paintings by Tim Rollins & K.O.S. made in collaboration with students from IS 218 and based on Du Bois’ seminal book Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil (1920).

Nina Chanel Abney
Your Gig Is Up, 2009
Acrylic on canvas
141 x 132.5 inches
The Bronx Museum of the Arts Permanent Collection
Gift of Zoë and Joel Dictrow
2014.3.1

Huma Bhabha
Clifton, 2010
Painted photograph and collage
79.5 x 49 inches
The Bronx Museum of the Arts Permanent Collection
Purchased with funds provided by Carole Server and Oliver Frankel with additional funds from Salon 94
2013.22

Abraham Cruzvillegas
Autorretrato ciego saliendo de mi terapia de rehabilitación…[Blind Self-Portrait While Walking Out of My Rehabilitation Therapy…], 2015
Neutron gray acrylic paint on newspaper clippings, cardboard, photographs, drawings, postcards, envelopes, tickets, vouchers, letters, drawings, posters, flyers, cards, recipes, napkins and steel pins on wall
Dimensions variable
The Bronx Museum of the Arts Permanent Collection
Purchased with funds from the Gelman Trust