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Wrong Is Not My Name

Notes on (Black) Art

Erica N. Cardwell

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Paperback

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English
Feminist Press at The City University of New York
25 April 2024
Forging new ground in art criticism: There is a dearth and silencing of Black and queer women art critics, with little to no representation of and models for Black lesbian critics, creating a landscape that implies such voices are ""not allowed"" to comment on visual culture. Wrong Is Not My Name extensively highlights Black women artists while also expanding the field of art criticism through representation, as well as politicizes the field further through form via a queer, nonlinear narrative.

Grounded in rigorous research:

A Black feminist praxis of citation underlies this book. Cardwell has done extensive research to ground her scholarship, making sure that her contributions both solidify her as an important new voice in contemporary art writing, as well as be in conversation with like-minded thinkers.

A multifaceted consideration of grief:

Authentic writing on loss and grief is always relevant, but especially at a time of global pandemic and societal division. Cardwell's experience of personal loss, and her yearning to feel closer to her deceased mother, is where Wrong Is Not My Name begins-expanding into a careful consideration of dysmorphia, intergenerational trauma, and Black female identity through the lens of culture.
By:  
Imprint:   Feminist Press at The City University of New York
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 127mm, 
ISBN:   9781558613812
ISBN 10:   1558613811
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface: On Adrienne Rich’s “Diving into the Wreck” 1. Chicken Soup: 7 Attempts 2. Thunder 3. Myriad Selves 4. France Diary, Part One 5. France Diary, Part Two: OBAMA HAS IPHONE 6. Looking 7. Basquiat’s Children 8. there but not there (Kara Walker and the Black Imagination) 9. Wrong is not my name and other poetics of criticism 10. Local Art: Art is Political When it Predicts our Future 11. Adebunmi Gbadebo and New Legacies of Black Women Abstraction 12. Referencing Point of View: The Textual Landscapes of Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum 13. Diaries, If Willarena Was an Artist 14. (More) Notes on Chicken Soup

Erica N. Cardwell is a writer, critic, and educator based in Brooklyn and Toronto. Cardwell's teaching and writing consider the consciousness and imaginations of people of color as a tool for social, spiritual, and collective movement. She centers Black feminist theory as her primary critical approach, and often writes about print and paper-making practices, archival media, and interdisciplinary performance. Her writing has appeared in ARTS. BLACK, Artsy, Frieze, BOMB, The Believer, The Brooklyn Rail, CULTURED, Hyperallergic, C Mag, Art in AmericaShe received her MFA in Writing from Sarah Lawrence College and has taught for various institutions, such as Parsons School of Design at The New School, Barnard College, City University of New York, and the Ox-Bow School of Art and Artists' Residency.

Reviews for Wrong Is Not My Name: Notes on (Black) Art

"""Mesmerizing."" —Debutiful “Wrong Is Not My Name is an astounding work by a singular writer, critic, and artist, and it is a privilege to bear witness to Cardwell’s unconventional journey.” —BUST “In interconnected essays, Cardwell celebrates the brilliant Black women who use art and storytelling to claim their place in the world.” —The Millions “Wrong Is Not My Name is a tender, urgent examination of art, grief, and self. What’s on the museum wall takes on new life, as if Carrie Mae Weems’s Kitchen Table Series had a soundtrack. I loved being suspended in this smoker’s sense of time, wandering the galleries of New York with what felt, at times, like Baldwin’s lost daughter. Erica N. Cardwell peers into paintings at close range; her criticism has the intimacy of breath. This search for meaning is a means of enduring, an art in itself.” —Aisha Sabatini Sloan, author of Dreaming of Ramadi in Detroit “A syntactically gorgeous page-turner, Wrong Is Not My Name demonstrates the ways in which art provides us with language to inhabit ‘an archive of self and body, of consciousness,’ and the lived histories that animate new visions for ways of being in an often hostile world. Here is a necessary and unforgettable intervention in the field of criticism that also doubles as a powerful narrative of self-unmaking. Erica N. Cardwell’s critical memoir sneaks up on you with insights both tender and incisive.” —Raquel Gutiérrez, author of Brown Neon “To be a critic is to contend with dozens of expectations regarding what it means to experience art and how such an experience should be grappled with for a public audience. To be a critic is to contend with the idea that somehow this kind of work is always finding its end—perpetually in crisis or consistently irrelevant, depending on one’s perspective. But when I read the essays that comprise Wrong Is Not My Name: Notes on (Black) Art, I am reminded that a critic can also be a person chasing after themselves and their histories, mapping the coordinates between love and pleasure, mourning and reawakening. To be a critic, as Erica N. Cardwell’s writing teaches me, is to (re)negotiate a mode of relation that foregrounds the intimacies that shape who we have been and who we are so that we might learn to ask the difficult, complex questions about who we are becoming. She does this, of course, in the lineage and tradition of the Black women writers and artists who have preceded her: Blondell Cummings, Barbara Christian, and Willarena, her mother. Maybe then, what I want everyone to know, is that this is a book not merely about the conditions that surround the tasks of art criticism. But that this is a book that invites its readers to peer closely at themselves, to trace the linings of life’s griefs and joys, and to call forth the names of our people. Each act one of refuge, restoration, and art itself.” —Jessica Lynne, cofounder of ARTS.BLACK “Wrong Is Not My Name invites readers on a journey through Erica N. Cardwell’s passionate and brilliant mind to explore what it means for the Black artist to look and envision against a white gaze, and what it means for a daughter to inherit her mother’s legacy. Cardwell reminds us throughout these essays that loss and dispossession are intimately entangled with the will to live and create, and in so doing, reveals the generative potential of grief. This is a book that I will return to again and again for its beautiful writing as much as for its wisdom and provocations.” —Grace M. Cho, author of Tastes Like War"


  • Nominated for Pushcart Prize 2020 (United States)
  • Short-listed for Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize 2020 (United States)
  • Winner of Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant 2021 (United States)
  • Winner of New York State Council for the Arts Grant 2022 (United States)

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