We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Undesirability and Her Sisters
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
20 May 2025

How Black women’s visual work functions in an era of new racial and gender meaning
In the wake of contemporary art’s post-Black turn and the mainstreaming of intersectionality, Undesirability and Her Sisters charts a new genealogy of Black women’s art that exposes the unfinished project of racial and gender empowerment in the twenty-first century. Tiffany Barber argues that Black women’s social positions at the intersection of race, gender, sexuality, and class are inherently queer, thus spurring unexpected aesthetic strategies that throw into high relief the ethical terrain of what it means to be Black and a woman now.
Undesirability and Her Sisters collates what Barber terms “undesirable” representations of Black female bodies in recent American sculpture, collage, photography, and dance-based performance art by Kara Walker, Wangechi Mutu, Xaviera Simmons, and Narcissister. These works not only engage the visual senses but also incorporate olfactory, haptic, and sonic experiences that challenge traditional interpretations of Blackness and womanhood in art history, Black Studies, feminist and gender studies, dance and performance studies, and queer studies. Instead of transcendental beauty, wholeness, and individual and collective becoming, the perverse Black female figures profiled here eschew sublimation and synthesis as necessary responses to racial and gender subjugation in the past, present, and future.
Through its unique, groundbreaking analysis, this book contributes to the ongoing discussions on the ethics of representation—the capacity to speak and act for oneself, to have significance and impact, and ultimately, to reject acknowledgment.
"Tiffany Barber shows how the artists Wangechi Mutu, Narcissister, Xaviera Simmons, and Kara Walker make work that refuses normative understandings of black womanhood. In lucid writing, she demonstrates how these women rebel against an aesthetic convention organized around respectability when representing black women, a disciplinary practice that has also structured the prevailing criticism of black women’s art. By upending this practice, Undesirability and her Sisters will cause a significant shift in how we interpret black women’s visual work."
"Undesirability and Her Sisters makes a significant contribution to our understanding of Black women’s art as well as Black women in art. Barber’s critical refusal of positive readings of Black women’s art, that is clearly not meant to be so, opens up new and more ethical terrain for understanding Black women’s art in the age of intersectionality."