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Awol Erizku
Ethiopian-American, b. 1988

Awol Erizku Ethiopian-American, b. 1988

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Awol Erizku, Girl with Bamboo Earring, 2009-2022

Awol Erizku Ethiopian-American, b. 1988

Girl with Bamboo Earring, 2009-2022
Duratrans on lightbox
99.1 x 76.2 cm. (39 x 30 in.)
Edition of 5 + 2 AP
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Awol Erizku’s Girl with a Bamboo Earring is an arresting and iconoclastic work that stands as a defining moment in the artist’s oeuvre. This reimagining of Johannes Vermeer’s Girl with...
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Awol Erizku’s Girl with a Bamboo Earring is an arresting and iconoclastic work that stands as a defining moment in the artist’s oeuvre. This reimagining of Johannes Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring functions as an act of appropriation that interrogates and dismantles entrenched notions of beauty and value as propagated by the art historical canon and wider societal frameworks. By re-envisioning Vermeer’s canonical painting – one that has become deeply ingrained in the collective visual consciousness – Erizku enacts a potent critique of the exclusionary practices inherent in the discipline of art history. His intervention exposes how this history operates to centre whiteness, marginalising or altogether erasing Black subjects from its narrative. In doing so, Erizku positions art as a critical vehicle for social interrogation and transformation.


The subject of Girl with a Bamboo Earring mirrors the posture and intensity of Vermeer’s sitter, yet there is an undeniable divergence that unsettles the visual familiarity of the original. While Vermeer’s subject projects a soft allure, Erizku’s subject fixes the viewer with a gaze that is penetrating and imbued with an almost uncanny self-awareness. This knowing stare disrupts the passive neutrality often attributed to portraiture and challenges the observer to confront their position within the hierarchical frameworks of race and representation. The bamboo earring, a deliberate subversion of Vermeer’s delicate pearl, is a signifier of cultural specificity and defiance, speaking to a diasporic aesthetic that reclaims agency from an art historical tradition that has long disregarded Blackness as a locus of artistic worth.


Erizku’s intervention is not merely an act of mimicry or homage; it is a radical reworking that interrogates the politics of visibility and absence in the visual arts. The juxtaposition of Vermeer’s aesthetic vocabulary with Erizku’s contemporary iconography foregrounds the ways in which art history has served as both a repository and perpetuator of exclusionary ideologies. Here, the act of seeing is reframed as an act of witnessing – one that implicates the viewer in the socio-political dynamics of representation. In Girl with a Bamboo Earring, Erizku forces us to confront the ways in which visual culture can both obscure and illuminate, marginalise and empower, erase and inscribe.


At the same time, Girl with a Bamboo Earring transcends critique to become a remarkable celebration of Black beauty, agency, and power. Erizku’s subject radiates a commanding presence, her gaze unapologetically assured, her features rendered with a luminous dignity that insists on her rightful place within the art historical canon. The work revels in the richness of its subject, elevating her to an iconic status that resonates far beyond the historical echoes of Vermeer’s painting. In its vibrant composition and unflinching clarity, the image affirms the beauty, resilience, and complexity of Black identity, offering not just a reimagining but a vision that is triumphant and deeply empowering.

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