See Carrie Mae Weems discussing The Kitchen Table Series



Transcript

CARRIE MAE WEEMS: Trying to locate my own voice--my own essence, my own particular utterance--was absolutely essential, of course. And it is for--for any artist. And for me, I think, you know, besides family pictures and stories, where I started thinking about installation and narrative and text and storytelling and all the sort of pieces, arranging things in any--in any way that I--I chose. "Kitchen Table" was very important because it really forced me to articulate something that I had not been able to do before and to really think about the way in which I wanted to present things for myself and to the world. It was a very interesting, interesting moment, not only for me, but, of course, in a social, cultural history as well. There were a number of things that were going on. Of course, going back to the artist's body, the artist's use of oneself, I've always used myself in--in my work and not necessarily because I was really mesmerized by how I looked, but--but because I was interested in what my own physical body--my own physicality, in fact, stood for. Not necessarily as--as Carrie but as a muse, as a guide, as a spiritual assistant who sees me through, who assists me in formulating again a world view, a position in relationship to other things. And so she crops up more and more and more and more and more as I work longer and longer and longer and longer and longer, as we'll see . . .