The University Art Museum (UAM) at the University at Albany presents Noel W Anderson: Black excellence in its main galleries. This will be Noel W Anderson’s largest and most comprehensive solo museum exhibition to date and will feature over 35 works. Newly commissioned work—most notably stretched and suspended Jacquard tapestries depicting digitally altered archival and media images centered on Black identity, labor, and performance—will be exhibited alongside earlier works and archival materials that demonstrate the arc of Anderson’s career. Other newly commissioned work includes the 40-minute video project Echoes of the new world (2025).

Underscoring Anderson’s exploration of performance, the two-story open floor plan of the UAM’s Edward Durell Stone building will create an arena-like space for the exhibition to unfold, offering vantage points to experience his work from above and below, compelling the viewer to reflect on their role as participant, observer, or witness. Two large-scale tapestries will be suspended in the center of the museum from its 30-foot-high ceilings. These tapestries will hover over viewers on the first floor and will be seen in their entirety by looking down from the second-floor mezzanine.

Anderson’s suspended tapestries pay homage to the canvases of American painter Sam Gilliam (1933 2022), while other tapestries are stretched like paintings. In both modes of presentation, “The tapestry is an open and expansive (cotton) field of possibility” for Anderson, who draws on the medium’s rich history from its privileged status as a Medieval art form to its 19th-century mechanical production by Joseph Marie Jacquard (1752–1834).

Anderson develops his tapestries through several stages of research, appropriation, and digital and physical manipulation. First, Anderson gathers images related to themes of Black identity, labor, performance, and success from various archives and media outlets. These images often include public figures of Black male exceptionalism (e.g., Paul Robeson, James Brown, LeBron James), and at times humorous images (e.g., drawings from Harlem Globetrotters coloring books). Anderson also appropriates police photographs from the Civil Rights-era through the 1970s. He digitally manipulates these found images through mirroring, inverting, cropping, or other forms of distortion before having them reproduced as cotton Jacquard tapestries, often mural-sized in scale.

Anderson further alters the image on the resulting tapestry through several physical processes: dyeing and staining with pools of acidic colors or blanching portions of the images; distressing the surface with steel brushes to create a fur-like texture; and picking the textiles apart thread by thread— a technique Anderson calls “opening the image.” Anderson’s process of manipulation disrupts the conventional historical narratives the images contain and begins to tell a parallel history related to themes of Black excellence, exhaustion, and erasure.

The tapestries will work in concert with the new video work in the exhibition, Echoes of the new world (2025), a collaboration with filmmaker and sound designer Solomon Bennett, presented in the Nancy Hyatt Liddle Gallery on the UAM’s second floor. Anderson writes:

The use of cotton and its attendant vocabulary once woven is an intricate exchange with American history. Loose threads and the natural warp of the material represent a glitch that invites viewers to revisit their memories and notions. The Jacquard weave recalls analog media while accompanying sound and video further develop dialogue with how technological developments have changed our seeing.

Expanding on ideas from Anderson and Bennett’s recent work for the 15th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, South Korea (2024), curated by Nicolas Bourriaud, this new video features appropriated and manipulated cinema and archival footage that includes audio of conductor Dean Dixon speaking on music theory, music of Duke Ellington, singer and actor Paul Robeson in his film portrayal of Emperor Jones, and news footage of OJ Simpson’s 1994 car chase, among other images. With the moving image, Anderson continues his strategy of appropriation seen in his tapestries and introduces a sonic dimension. For Anderson, “Sound breaks the surface of the image” in a way analogous to his physical disruptions of his tapestries’ surfaces.

Additional works in the exhibition demonstrate the development of Anderson’s ideas over the arc of his career. These include a series of prints on handmade blue paper (2018), completed during his Dieu Donne residency, and his Ebony erasure works (2012-18). For the latter, he chemically lifted the ink from vintage pages of the iconic magazine in order to selectively erase and manipulate portions of their images. These pieces represent early explorations on themes of race and erasure still salient in Anderson’s work today.

The exhibition reflects on Black excellence—a term whose current usage grew out of the Civil Rights movement but whose concepts have been debated in Black thought and education since Reconstruction—and asks in what ways it is intertwined with themes of exhaustion and erasure.
Noel W Anderson: Black Excellence is the third in a trilogy of solo exhibition projects by the artist, preceded by Erasure’s Edge (KMAC, Louisville, Kentucky, 2022-23) and Black exhaustion (Shirley Fiterman Art Center, CUNY, New York, New York, 2023).

The exhibition will be on view for both the fall and spring semesters, with a brief pause during the campus’s winter break.