Betye Saar's Black Dolls
About This Event
Live event at DiMenna Children's History Museum
About Betye Saar's Black Dolls
Now at the DiMenna Children’s History Museum, *Betye Saar’s Black Dolls* presents a focused look at the artist’s use of dolls and found materials to confront the imagery historically used to define Black life in America. Saar’s assemblage practice turns playthings into documents, tracing how stereotypes are made, circulated, and resisted. Framed for kids and families, the exhibition invites careful looking and plainspoken questions about representation. One clear takeaway is how Saar makes the domestic object carry public history without didactic explanation.
About the Artist
Betye Saar
Betye Saar is an American visual artist whose practice centers on assemblage, combining found materials with printmaking and other image-based methods. Emerging alongside the Black Arts Movement, she has used folklore, domestic objects, and mass-produced imagery to confront how race and femininity are constructed in American culture.