Layering history and image to show that anything is possible when motivated by love.
For Hank Wilis Thomas, art is a means to visualise a message. Moving through sculpture, photography, film and installation, he uses an archive-led approach largely inspired by his mother, photographer and art historian Deborah Willis. He often appropriates pre-existing ephemera from sport and popular culture into his work. Verve (2017) and Visa (2017) for example, rework football jerseys and prison uniforms into quilts, recalling both Fauve expressionist Henri Matisse and the embroidered appliqué of traditional Ghanaian Asafo flags. As a founder of the artist-run collective For Freedoms, Thoma...
Bio
Hank Willis Thomas is a conceptual artist born in 1976 in Plainfield, New Jersey. He now lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Career
Thomas has delivered more than 150 talks and lectures around the world, educating others on his work, exploring Black progress in the 21st century and spotlighting overlooked historical narratives.
Did you know?
The artist is also one of the co-founders of trailblazing artist-run collective For Freedoms, renowned for billboard campaigns and public artworks designed to increase political engagement and prompt widespread civic conversations - “I think public art is propaganda, frankly.”