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Irene Antonia Diane Reece: Don't Cry for Me When I'm Gone


January 18 - March 06,2025

From Women & Their Work: “Grief is evidence of love, it is also a way of honoring our commitment to those who have died.” - bell hooks Don’t Cry For Me When I’m Gone is a photographic installation featuring Black Southern archives which elicit memories as well as feelings of grief and kinship in the artist and potentially the viewers themselves. Artist Irene Antonia Diane Reece’s embrace of these archives comes with feelings of heaviness and joy, prompting love and grief interchangeably. While the work is grounded in photography, the addition of Black and family archives adds depth to it – layering not only text, but a sense of comfort and belonging. For Reece, making this work is a vulnerable process. With every piece, she reveals an array of emotions, inviting the viewer to connect to a feeling or memory; whether grief, self-love, trauma, or hope. This spiritual ritual of caring for and acknowledging archival documents is an act of preservation and healing. With this new body of work, Reece hopes to spark self-reflection and curiosity. By sharing her own story and heritage, she encourages viewers to uncover, understand, and remember as a way to heal, dream, and live. Don’t Cry For Me When I’m Gone is a reminder to care deeply – for community and for oneself. About the Artist Irene Antonia Diane Reece creates image-based, multimedia installations that engage viewers in conversations about the African diaspora, family histories, and re-memory. While lens-based, Reece’s work has become increasingly critical of the very tools she uses as she seeks to centralize and celebrate the complexities of Black identities, engage and deconstruct the violence of the camera, as well as protect Black archives. About Women & Their Work: Women & Their Work fosters the artistic growth of women artists by encouraging them to make new, adventurous work and develops audiences for whom contemporary art is meaningful. Our mission is to ensure that diverse women artists are equitably represented in all forms of art. For 46 years, Women & Their Work has been a cornerstone of the Austin arts community and has actively developed the careers of more than 2,000 women artists.

Reception: January 18, 2024 | 7-9 pm

Women & Their Work (Cesar Chavez) 1311 East Cesar Chavez Street
Austin, Texas 78702
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