André Ramos-Woodard

 
 

2023 Critical Mass Exhibition

BLACK SNAFU

Apr 4 - 27, 2024

Anti-Blackness seems inescapably mixed into whatever context I search through; photography, science, government, art... look into any “field” and see for yourself. My people have had to cry, scream, and fight for respect for centuries, and we still have not gained what we rightfully deserve. To move past the damage this has been done to our society, we can’t simply deny our history—we must recognize it. We must acknowledge the many ways in which this country has perpetuated a racial hierarchy since these lands were first colonized and stripped from indigenous peoples by white supremacists, and Black people were stolen from their native land and brought to America by those very same people.

In BLACK SNAFU (Situation Niggas: All Fucked Up), I use my camera as a tool to accentuate the realities of my Black experience, turning the lens on my proudly Black body, my family, found objects, and the places I inhabit. These photographs are then juxtaposed with appropriated hand-drawn depictions of Black people that I've found throughout the history of cartooning. The fact that the images are made by my hands allows me to fight back against the historically racist caricatures that I steal; reclaiming them in my pieces to depict Blackness authentically. By combining these ambivalent visual languages, I intend to expose to viewers America’s deplorable connection to anti-Black tropes through pop culture while simultaneously celebrating the reality of what it means to be Black.



Raised in the Southern states of Tennessee and Texas, André Ramos-Woodard (African American, b. 1994, he/they) is a photo-based artist who uses their work to emphasize the experiences of marginalized communities while accenting the repercussions of contemporary and historical discrimination. His art conveys ideas of communal and personal identity, influenced by their direct experience with life as a queer African American. Focusing on Black liberation, queer justice, and the reality of mental health, he aspires for his art to help bring power to the people. 

Selected for Foam Museum’s Foam TALENT Award in 2024 and a two-time top-50 Finalist for Photolucida’s Critical Mass (in 2020 and 2023), Ramos-Woodard has shown their work at various institutions across the United States a beyond, including the Foam Museum–The Netherlands, Amsterdam, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston–Houston, Texas, Leon Gallery–Denver, Colorado, and FILTER Photo–Chicago, Illinois. He received his BFA from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, and his MFA at The University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico. André currently works as the Exhibitions and Programs Coordinator at the Houston Center for Photography in Houston, Texas.