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Van Every/Smith Galleries at Davidson College

Van Every/Smith Galleries at Davidson College

Davidson, NORTH CAROLINA

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Capoeira by McArthur Freeman
  • McArthur Freeman
  • Capoeira, 2006
  • Acrylic on panel
  • Inv: 2733
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Gallery Purchase

The painting’s title, Capoeira, refers to the Afro-Brazilian martial art that includes elements of dance, acrobatics, and music, developed by enslaved Africans in Brazil in the 16th century. Later, in the 19th century, capoeira’s popularity among bodyguards and hitmen of Brazilian warlords and criminals led to its being outlawed in 1888, shortly after the country’s abolition of slavery. Under the guise of law enforcement, police frequently arrested and tortured those caught practicing the martial art—a “legalized” means of inflicting violence upon the country’s Black citizens.

Freeman’s painting depicts two men in an embrace – both shirtless, with their gloved hands and fingers delicately touching. The work juxtaposes traditional dance, ornamentation, and intra-community violence, as one man points a gun at the other’s head. The depiction of a choreographed moment here may allude to orchestrated, systemic, institutional racism, in which policies and laws are enacted to intentionally oppress those of other races.

  • Current Location: Collection Storage - Hanging Storage
  • Collections: Africana Studies, Current and Former Davidson College Faculty, Painting, Performers: Actors, Dancers, Musicians , Social Justice

Other Work From Van Every/Smith Galleries at Davidson College

Plate 11 (from Graceland) by William Eggleston
Untitled (79-12-2) by Garo Zareh Antreasian
The Song of Songs by Michael Rothenstein
Sand Dust by Herb Jackson
Untitled, Lolita Series by Graham Ovenden
Sonny Tufts by Philippe Halsman
Verbruderung by Käthe Kollwitz
Le Bassin de Deauville (In the Morning Light) by Eugène Boudin
The Anti-Archive of Trauma on the U.S.-Mexico Border by Susan Harbage Page
Retired (Portrait) by Burt Silverman
See all artwork from Van Every/Smith Galleries at Davidson College