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    • Homage to the Auction Block (2019-ongoing)
    • #Killers (2017-2019)
    • Family Pictures (2016)
    • The School of Love (2016)
    • watercolors (2014)
    • you don't deserve me (2012)
    • for Smithson (2010)
    • rapture (2008)
    • grids (2008)
    • when you're a boy... (2005 and ongoing)
    • circumference (2005)
    • early painting installations
  • public projects & exhibitions
    • in the name of love (2019)
    • the color of remembering (2019)
    • Three Deliberate Grays For Freddie (2018-9)
    • Love Letter to a Library (2018)
    • A Partial List... (2016)
    • there is no one left to blame (2013)
    • Neons (2008-present)
    • Mail Art (2001-present)
    • Proposal for a Memorial at Faneuil Hall (2018)
    • Proposal for Slavery Memorial at the Tuilleries (2020)
  • writing
    • art...and everything after (blog)
    • essays
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steve locke

"Laborare. Non arbitror."
  • home
  • about
  • studio work
    • Homage to the Auction Block (2019-ongoing)
    • #Killers (2017-2019)
    • Family Pictures (2016)
    • The School of Love (2016)
    • watercolors (2014)
    • you don't deserve me (2012)
    • for Smithson (2010)
    • rapture (2008)
    • grids (2008)
    • when you're a boy... (2005 and ongoing)
    • circumference (2005)
    • early painting installations
  • public projects & exhibitions
    • in the name of love (2019)
    • the color of remembering (2019)
    • Three Deliberate Grays For Freddie (2018-9)
    • Love Letter to a Library (2018)
    • A Partial List... (2016)
    • there is no one left to blame (2013)
    • Neons (2008-present)
    • Mail Art (2001-present)
    • Proposal for a Memorial at Faneuil Hall (2018)
    • Proposal for Slavery Memorial at the Tuilleries (2020)
  • writing
    • art...and everything after (blog)
    • essays
  • exhibition history
  • press
  • contact
The page from my Kickstarter showing that after 5 days after the Juneteenth 2019 launch, we reached our goal.

The page from my Kickstarter showing that after 5 days after the Juneteenth 2019 launch, we reached our goal.

This time last year….

June 24, 2020

It was a year ago I tried to make a monument….

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Tags: auction block, Boston Globe, jenee osterheldt, Murray Whyte, Juneteenth, Kickstarter
1 Comment
Statement on FAMILY PICTURES, 2016

Statement on FAMILY PICTURES, 2016

On making pictures no one wants us to see

June 08, 2020

Back in 2016, I made a body of work that addressed the historical appetite for images of violence against Black people.

That work, FAMILY PICTURES came to fruition because of a lot of people.

I had the wonderful and immensely talented Ryan Arthurs-a white man-as my camera operator, my retoucher and my photography teacher. I learned how to use a new technology and marry it to my own vision. The quality of his teaching in this project is borne out by the quality of the work. Ryan listened to what I wanted and he helped me figure out the best way to do it. He was patient and informative and consistent and never once tried to undermine me or redirect my vision of the work. It remains one of the best working relationships I’ve ever had.

I had the generous and brave Camilo Alvarez as my gallerist at Samsøñ. We had been working together for years and we were about to mount my third solo exhibitions with the gallery, the show that became The School of Love. I showed him FAMILY PICTURES on my computer and we both cried. I wanted to show the work with him but to his trained eye it was clear that this had to be an exhibition on its own. He suggested that the show be in two parts. He would show The School of Love. He also said something to me I’ve never forgotten. “People expect me to show a work like FAMILY PICTURES. You need to find someone to do it that no one would expect.”

I immediately thought of Arlette.

Arlette Kayafas is a white woman who runs one of the best photography galleries in the country, Gallery Kayafas. I asked Camilo to call her and set up a meeting. Even though we knew each other I wanted to be formal in presenting the work. We all met, Camilo and I, and Arlette and her husband, Gus-a white man, who is an amazing photographic printer and runs Palm Press. I showed them the work and my idea for the exhibition. Arlette immediately said that she wanted to show the work. Moreover, she said that she felt like it was her responsibility to show it.

Gus printed the work with an extreme amount of care and elegance. He had many ideas about presentation, slipcovers, and editioning that I would have done if I had the money to do so. It was a tremendously expensive project to do. Gus found a paper with a high cotton content-a feature which was important for the concept of the work, considering the relationship between cotton and the images in the photographs.

I designed a layout that involved making pine vitrines on saw horses for the display of the work. These vitrines were covered with plexiglass. At about 3 x 6 feet, the effect was to walk through a series of images like a viewing at a wake. These items were all built to my specifications by white men-Sam Toabe, Pat Falco, and Lee Wormald. Their craft and patience was exemplary.

Installation view, FAMILY PICTURES at Gallery Kayafas

Installation view, FAMILY PICTURES at Gallery Kayafas

People in the gallery would say to Arlette, “This is so hard to look at.” She would square her shoulders and say to them, “Imagine how hard is must be to have to make it.” She was unflinching in her ability to talk about the work. She researched the texts that I had provided for the gallery and she took excellent care of the images as well as my vision. She took the work on in a commercial space and worked closely with me to have my vision realized and respected. I told her that she would not sell anything and she told me that she didn’t care. (She actually DID sell some of the work, which is a testament to what a great gallerist she is. She also refused to sell the work to people she thought wouldn’t understand it.)

Arlette facilitated that discussion by hosting this show. I look back on it at this moment because the issues are the same, but now-due to COVID and other considerations there are fewer art spaces, curators and even fewer galleries who would risk engaging with this work. For all of the talk of “diversity” in the art world, it remains very much closed to Black artists-especially if those artists’ work focused on something other than a palatable vision of Blackness that is easy to consume.

I am so grateful that I was able to find people who helped me realize and present this work. In a world where so many people want to pay lip service to Black people, I was fortunate to find a white woman who was willing and unafraid to present a body of work critical of white pleasure at Black pain. I am grateful that I was able to find some collaborators who did not try to undermine me.

Tags: Family Pictures, Gallery Kayafas, Samsøn, Ryan Arthurs, Pat Falco, Sam Toabe
2 Comments
child-1.jpg

What do we tell the children?

June 01, 2020

It is a sin to lie to a child.

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Tags: children, race, BLM, #BlackLivesMatter, Jane Elliott, Tim Wise, Robin D'Angelo, Southern Poverty Law Center, Civil right, Civil rights martyrs, Viola Liuzzo, racism, lynching, Family Pictures
10 Comments
Kurt Steinberg, Ed. D., Eighth President of Montserrat College of Art on the day of his investiture, 29 March 2019

Kurt Steinberg, Ed. D., Eighth President of Montserrat College of Art on the day of his investiture, 29 March 2019

Some thoughts on Dr. Kurt Steinberg and the Creative Life

March 29, 2019 in Artists, criticism, history, Influences, lectures, Mom, public talks, teaching, texts

Delegates representing colleges from all over New England, four former presidents and a founding faculty of Montserrat College of Art were present on Friday, March 29 as the college inaugurated Kurt T. Steinberg, Ed.D. as its eighth president during a ceremony at The Cabot Theatre. The processional, played by the Beverly High School Band directed by Adam Costa, included Montserrat faculty and trustees, speakers and the delegates.

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Tags: Art, Kurt Steinberg, Montserrat College of Art, MassArt, Inauguration, speech
1 Comment
An image from Tray John’s Facebook page, screen shot 7 January 2019, where they copied and pasted my blog post and photo about being detained by police.

An image from Tray John’s Facebook page, screen shot 7 January 2019, where they copied and pasted my blog post and photo about being detained by police.

Intent follows the bullet...

January 10, 2019 in everything after, criticism, history, hypocrites, race

An article about the article I wrote about being stopped by the police, which illustrates that things appear for “first time as tragedy; the second time as farce.” And I would add for the third time a viral Social Media posts.

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Tags: I fit the description, Criminal Minds, police violence, Dallas Morning News, Boston Globe, Huffington Post, Good Men Project, Tray John, Facebook, Twitter, MassArt, Social Media, Social Media Influencer, Social Media Currency, Instagram, Steven M. Williams, trauma, Law and Order, Sam Waterston, I'll Fly Away, PTSD, GOFUNDME
22 Comments
The artist with the brilliant landscape architect Scheri Fultineer (ASLA)

The artist with the brilliant landscape architect Scheri Fultineer (ASLA)

Uncommon Monument: A King Memorial for Boston...

January 09, 2019 in lectures, panels, public talks, history

A bunch of really smart architects (and me) weigh in on what we want (and don’t want) in a Boston memorial to Martin Luther and Coretta Scott King. Hosted by the Boston Society of Architects and WGBH

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Tags: KingBoston, King Memorial, WGBH, Boston Society of Architects, Martin Luther King, Coretta Scott King, Hank Willis Thomas, Renee Loth, Meejin Yoon, Max Page, Scheri Fultineer, Ian Taberner, Kara Elliott-Ortega
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minneapolis.jpeg

An email exchange about a "rough man" from the Minneapolis Police Department...

January 07, 2019 in everything after, criticism, cops, hypocrites, politics, race

Sorry, it’s not “that” kind of “rough man.” When a police officer closes an email with a quote that supports state violence as a guarantee to safety, is that a threat? (And that quote he is using? George Orwell never said it.)

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Tags: police, police contact, "rough man", Minneapolis Police Department, emai, email, George Orwell, Notes on Nationalism, Marty Walsh, Philandro Castile, Richard Grenier, Minneapolis Star Tribune
7 Comments
The artist with his father, Valoitz Heneri Locke, Cleveland, OH, date unknown

The artist with his father, Valoitz Heneri Locke, Cleveland, OH, date unknown

An index of love...

January 05, 2019 in everything after, history

What happens when your only memory of love is a photograph?

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Tags: photography, Mary Cassatt, Marilyn Monroe, pre-Code, Titian, "punks", Polaroid
1 Comment

A recent artwork created based on a request on Facebook Messenger

A Selection of Colors....

December 22, 2018

Violence against black people in America has always been in the service of a domestic identity….

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Tags: art, I fit the description, messenger, Gardner Museum, Freddie Gray, Benjamin Moore, Family Pictures
1 Comment
Mr. Peterson sent this release to members of the press. I replied to him and I copied members of the press with whom I have spoken about the project..

Mr. Peterson sent this release to members of the press. I replied to him and I copied members of the press with whom I have spoken about the project..

All skinfolk ain't kinfolk....

August 11, 2018

When you talk about someone, expect what you say to get back to them…

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Tags: auction block, Faneuil Hall, Kevin C. Peterson, RadioBoston, Zora Neale Hurston
4 Comments
When someone asks me, "Which James Baldwin novel should I read?"  I always recommend this one.

When someone asks me, "Which James Baldwin novel should I read?"  I always recommend this one.

Books and characters where I found myself...

August 05, 2018

I found myself by reading books about other people….

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Tags: books, characters, James Baldwin, writers, library, Boston Public Library, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Barbara Kingsolver, Emily Bronte, Harper Lee, Hannah Arendt, Sam Shephard, Richard Addams, Toni Morrison, Primo Levi, Tony Kushner, Andrew Holleran, Mary Shelley, William Faulkner, Graham Greene, Stephen King, Frank Herbert, Vladimir Nabokov, Colton Whitehead, Chaim Potok, Joseph Conrad, Gustave Flaubert, UDJHS, Nick Carraway, Heathcliff, Atticus Finch, Rufus Scott, Catherine Earnshaw, Austin, Fiver, Jake Barnes, Belize, Malone, Paul D., Frankenstein's Creature, Danny Torrance, Lolita, Lila Mae Watson, Jacob Kahn, Asher Lev, Emma Bovary
2 Comments
The notion that people enslaved and bred like cattle to pick the crop that turned this country into an economic powerhouse are somehow not interested in "hard work" is the kind of stupid that gives stupid a bad name.

The notion that people enslaved and bred like cattle to pick the crop that turned this country into an economic powerhouse are somehow not interested in "hard work" is the kind of stupid that gives stupid a bad name.

An overview of some of the anonymous comments regarding the proposed "Auction Block Memorial...."

July 30, 2018

Anonymous comments are from the throat of hell, so why do we allow them?

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Tags: auction block, Faneuil Hall, comments, Josiah McElheney
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IMG_7286.jpg

Watercolor and Print Sale to Finance the Studio Build Project!

December 21, 2017 in everything after

A plan to raise funds to build a permanent studio at my home.

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Tags: build, etching, fundraising, Keller Williams Realty, Larry Lawfer, mail art, print, print sale, risograph, Samsøn, Seitz Architects, silkscreen, studio, Venmo, watercolors, Wing Club Press
1 Comment
elaine-reichek.jpg

Live from Mrs. G's House: Episode 3-Elaine Reichek

July 17, 2017 in everything after

A conversation with the brilliant and busy Elaine Reichek

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Tags: Artists, cross stitch, Elaine Reichek, galleries, Gardner Museum, influences, loss, needlepoint, painting
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jen-hall.jpg

Live from Mrs. G's House: Episode 2-Dr. Jennifer Hall

June 26, 2017 in everything after

A conversation with the brilliant Dr. Jennifer Hall.

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Tags: aesthetics, Artists, career, CAVS, embodiment, Gardner Museum, influences, jennifer hall, learning, live at Mrs- G's, Living Room, mit, studio practice, teaching
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Featured Posts

Featured
Mar 29, 2019
Artists, criticism, history, Influences, lectures, Mom, public talks, teaching, texts
Some thoughts on Dr. Kurt Steinberg and the Creative Life
Mar 29, 2019
Artists, criticism, history, Influences, lectures, Mom, public talks, teaching, texts
Mar 29, 2019
Artists, criticism, history, Influences, lectures, Mom, public talks, teaching, texts
Jan 10, 2019
everything after, criticism, history, hypocrites, race
Intent follows the bullet...
Jan 10, 2019
everything after, criticism, history, hypocrites, race
Jan 10, 2019
everything after, criticism, history, hypocrites, race
Jan 9, 2019
lectures, panels, public talks, history
Uncommon Monument: A King Memorial for Boston...
Jan 9, 2019
lectures, panels, public talks, history
Jan 9, 2019
lectures, panels, public talks, history
Jan 5, 2019
everything after, history
An index of love...
Jan 5, 2019
everything after, history
Jan 5, 2019
everything after, history
Aug 5, 2018
Books and characters where I found myself...
Aug 5, 2018
Aug 5, 2018