Carletta Carrington Wilson
The figure of the fugative “advertised for capture” was illustrated by various cuts
accompanying ads appearing in numerous 18th and 19th century newspapers, not only,
in the United States, but also in countries such as Brazil and England.
Iconic figures of a man and woman form the foundation of knot free kNot human.
Shown in flight, toting a bundle of scant possessions these figures appeared for
centuries. They were not seen as symbols of and testaments to an unceasing
resistance perpetuated on both sides of the Atlantic. Instead, they were seen as
committing a criminal act. Wilson’s figures give visual voice to individuals who
decided to run towards an uncertain future.
In the kNot free kNot human poster series Wilson re-imagines the iconic runaway
slave advertisement. Here an individual reappears accompanied by text
Which evokes the complexity of the predicament that binds them to a body that
they cannot claim as their own.
The narrative threads of Carletta Carrington Wilson’s literary and visual works began to
merge as her artist books, installations and collages mirrored the melding of language
and form. World exhibited at the Seattle Art Fair, Wa Na Wari, Bainbridge Island Museum
of Art, CoCA (Center on Contemporary Art, King Street Station, Elisabeth C. Miller
Horticultural Library, ArtXchange Gallery, Kittredge Art Gallery, Northwest African
American Museum, University of Washington’s Jacob Lawrence Gallery, Gallery Onyx,
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center and Denver Public Library created conversations and
inferences between series and individual works.
With a focus on the mid-to-late 19th and early 20th centuries Wilson attempts to “see
through history.” An avid reader of history and historical documents, Wilson’s literary
and/or visual responses answer questions she never knew to ask.
Wilson is the author of the newly published Poem of Stone & Bone: The Iconography of
James W. Washington Jr. in Fourteen Stanzas and Thirty-One Days. Her poems and essays
appear in Take A Stand: Art Against Hate as well as the anthologies, Stealing Light, Make
It True: Poems from Cascadia and Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry for the
21st Century. Journal publications include The African American Review, Cimarron
Review, Calyx, Pilgrimage, Obsidian III, the Seattle Review and Raven Chronicles. Her zine,
night of the stereotypes was exhibited in conjunction with the installation of the name at
Wa Na Wari.