I Am Not A Man

September 9, 2009

Dread Scott

Artist, American, born 1965

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I Am Not A Man was performed in 2009 on the streets of Harlem. Scott, dressed like a Civil Rights protester, walked for an hour wearing an iconic but altered sign that read “I AM NOT A MAN.” His performance appropriates but inverts the message “I AM A MAN” first carried by Memphis sanitation workers while on strike in 1968. Pointing to the importance of Civil Rights protests as well as to their limitations, Scott was challenging the idea that the United States had entered a post-racial period after the election of Barack Obama. Intentionally stumbling and even losing his pants at one point during the performance, Scott staged these humiliating scenes to call attention to the ongoing negation of Black lives in American society. The sign and his actions elicited a spectrum of reactions from passersby, including two police officers, as seen in the photograph. The work resonates with several pieces in the National Gallery’s collection, including Glenn Ligon’s 1988 painting Untitled (I Am A Man) and press photographs of the sanitation strike.


Artwork overview

More About this Artwork

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Artwork history & notes

Provenance

Dread Scott, New York; NGA purchase (through (Cristin Tierney Gallery, New York), 2023.

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