In her practice, Akunyili Crosby meditates on familial life within a transcultural context. Her large-scale compositions of everyday domestic scenes synthesize drawing, painting, printmaking, and photography. And We Begin to Let Go depicts the artist and her husband, who leans over her shoulder. To make it, Akunyili Crosby drew from Nigerian print media publications and her family’s photographic archive. She united these images’ varied photographic textures through the same formal treatment: Xerox-transfer, a printmaking technique through which a printed image is transferred onto another surface using an acetone solvent. Images of smiling faces, elaborate coifs, and patterned clothing suffuse the picture plane, accruing on the surfaces of this marital encounter.

Medium Acrylic, acetone transfers, charcoal, pastel, marble dust, and collage on paper
Dimensions Sheet: 84 × 105" (213.4 × 266.7 cm)
Credit Promised gift of Jerry I. Speyer and Katherine Farley
Object number PG857.2013
Department Drawings and Prints

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Collage

Derived from the French verb coller, meaning “to glue,” collage refers to both the technique and the resulting work of art in which fragments of paper and other materials are arranged and glued or otherwise affixed to a supporting surface.

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