Opening during the final month of a historically difficult year—a year that stretched patience thin and tested the tensile strength of American society—Senga Nengudi’s retrospective Topologies at the Denver Art Museum (DAM) traverses decades to adeptly meet the moment.
There is a timeless quality to Senga Nengudi’s work, some of which was created half a century ago but still rings true in the modern era. She was in fact an important player in the feminist performance art and the Black American avant-garde movements of the late 1960s and 1970s, and has continued her practice for over 50 years. Through her iconic, pendulous pantyhose sculptures, evocative performances, and collaborative happenings, Nengudi captures a numinous elegance paired with a distinctive rawness and in doing so comments on the conditions of Black female embodiment.