Artist Donel Williams reflects on his unconventional path into art, from community college photography to his studies at UCLA, where he developed a multidisciplinary practice spanning painting, performance, and installation. Drawing on personal history and mentorship, he describes how early experiences shaped his engagement with labor, material, and image-making. The conversation centers on the expectations placed on Black artists within contemporary art, particularly the pressure toward figuration, and Williams’ turn toward abstraction as both a formal and political strategy. Through work informed by redacted government documents and performative gestures that critique authorship and visibility, he examines the tensions between identity, audience legibility, and artistic autonomy.
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296 Josh Schaedel — Artist-Run Spaces, Photography Economics & Community in Los Angeles
294 Faris McReynolds — Painting, Art Market Critique, Artist Labor & Institutional Power
293 Jahn Muller: Painting, Generational Memory & the Experience of Art
292 Katie Hector — Portrait Painting, Beauty Standards, and Contemporary Image Culture
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