Vicki Meek
The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors

The Crying Room:  A Memorial to the Ancestors

© Vicki Meek

The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors
The Crying Room:  A Memorial to the Ancestors
ArtistAmerican, born 1950
CultureAmerican
Titles
  • The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors
Date1992
PlaceDallas, Texas, United States
MediumInstallation of found objects, sand, and wall texts and drawings
DimensionsOverall: dimensions variable
Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by AT&T New Art/New Visions and the Wilder Foundation
Object number93.255
Not on view

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Description

The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors bears witness to the enormous human suffering of African slaves as they were transported against their will to the Americas. Artist Vicki Meek represents the terrible history of the Middle Passage through a sophisticated layering of sources, ranging from the bleak records of the European slave ships to musical chants that attest to the survival of traditional cultures in the New World.


Dominating The Crying Room is an elaborate Yoruba ideograph representing “The Lifting of the Plate,” or the final ascension that takes one from death into the realm of the ancestors. Another wall of the installation chronicles the horrifying mathematical calculations of slavers who estimated acceptable losses in human life; and the third is inscribed with symbols of hope and redemption. Upon leaving the gallery, the visitor is invited to add a personal comment to the memorial wall.


Public memorials are important because they allow a society or a community to reconcile its grief. The collective grief over the loss of the millions of ancestors lost during the Middle Passage and through the mass lynchings of the 20th century has never had an outlet. Consequently, this pent-up grief manifests itself in many inexplicable ways. . . . The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors is meant to allow us to remember and grieve for all those many ancestors whose lives were sacrificed.


 —Vicki Meek


 


 


ProvenanceThe artist; purchased by MFAH, 1993.
Exhibition History"Fresh Visions/New Voices: Emerging African-American Artists in Texas," The Glassell School of Art, Houston, September 13–November 29, 1992; The Galveston Arts Center, January 18–February 28, 1993; The Arlington Museum of Art, September 10–October 30, 1993.

"African-American Art in the Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, February 22–May 9, 2004.

Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
None of the installation elements are signed.

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

If you have questions about this work of art or the MFAH Online Collection please contact us.

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Vernon Fisher
1981
Found objects, acrylic paint, and text panel
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1994
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2000.519.A,.B
Selection of documents from folder
Ad Reinhardt
1946–1956, published 1975
Offset photolithographs
2007.1032.A-.GG
Desk
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c. 1875
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Corner Cabinet
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2002.3547
[Various Portraits and Landscapes]
late 19th–early 20th century
Gelatin silver prints, albumen print, tintype and color lithograph
2022.633.1-.13
Ancestors
Diane Tani
1989
Chromogenic print with printed text
95.105
Dinner Plate (one of a pair)
c. 1770
Tin-glazed earthenware (delftware)
B.56.88.1
Dinner Plate (one of a pair)
c. 1770
Tin-glazed earthenware (delftware)
B.56.88.2
Kept
Heidi Kumao
1993
Gelatin silver film transparency
97.283.A-.L
Five Spoons for Weighing Gold
1800–1900
Brass
97.1514.1-.5
Wutala, Ancestral Crown
15th–17th century
Gold
2004.2311