(Brooklyn, New York, 1960 - )
1991
Photogravure with screenprint on paper
73 3/4 x 37 3/4 in. (187.5 x 96.0 cm)
Collection of the Akron Art Museum
Museum Acquisition Fund
1995.4
In her work, Lorna Simpson repeatedly uses a similar group of images that have both literal and symbolic associations: a braid represents racial difference; an old South Carolina smokehouse is a former slave quarters; human forms are faceless and therefore silent. In Counting, the first print Simpson ever produced, these elements are stacked like a totem pole. The numbers she includes—a list of work shifts, an equation between bricks and years of slavery, numbers of braids—may seem unrelated: as careless as the phrase “Who’s counting?” But Simpson’s work may be just that—an attempt to account for, and make sense of racial difference and inequality over countless years.