Mickalene Thomas' art conveys a bold and contemporary sense of female power and sexuality packaged in a vibrant aesthetic. Her visual motifs and thematic explorations of race, gender, and sexuality travel across visual mediums: from photography to Rhinestone encrusted enamel and acrylic paintings, collage to prints, and video to installation.
Read MorePhotography is an integral component of Thomas' artistic practice. Initially focusing on her mother as a subject in her Yale years, Thomas' sitters have included family, friends, lovers, and influential figures.
With the exception of a few intimate standalone series like 'Black and White Polaroid' (2012), the majority of Mickalene Thomas' photography consists of lively staged group and single portraits. Black women, vibrantly dressed or naked, gaze directly at the viewer in confident poses from pastiches of 1960s to 80s-style domestic interiors.
Thomas builds her painted and collaged works from the vibrant and confident femininity of her photographs. Both formats render these subjects in a patchwork of styles. Fragments of photography, sometimes overpainted, intersect with areas of painting or printed material.
The artist often asserts her confident Black female characters into the annals of art history. Thomas' Le déjeuner sur l'herbe: les trois femmes noires (2010) riffs off Édouard Manet's iconic and once scandalous painting with three Black women looking at the viewer. Thomas' 2021 'Resist' series reimagines Pablo Picasso's sombre Guernica (1937) with imagery of the Black Civil Rights and Black Lives Matter movements.
Mickalene Thomas' prints on the one hand derive largely from her paintings and collages, however, prints like Michelle O (2008), now residing in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C., are set apart. Referencing Andy Warhol's 'Jackie O' screenprints from the 1960s, Thomas' Michelle Obama homage presents a pop art-style, pale blue screenprint of America's first Black First Lady.
Thomas has also long worked with video and sound as a medium. Early examples from the mid-2000s such as Oh Mickey (2008) and the 'Ain't I a Woman' series (2009) brought her portrait subjects to life, singing or making poses for the camera, against a background of popular songs in screens framed like paintings.
This has matured into multi-channel works such as the intimate black-and-white Je t'aime (2014) and Je t'aime trois (2018), which feature clips of outdoors and interior scenes, influential Black figures, and the artist's mother, as well as footage from civil-rights era and contemporary Black Lives Matter protests.
Brining to life the vibrant staged interiors that are the setting of many of her artworks, Thomas creates immersive room-scale installations that recreate these environments within galleries. Presenting an aesthetic gleaned from 1960s—1980s decor, they often feature artworks, sound elements, and occasionally video.
For Art Basel in 2013 Thomas created Better Days (2013), an immersive environment within the Galerie at Volkshaus evoking the aesthetic of a 1970s house party. Complete with period decor and a cocktail bar, Thomas activated the space with nightly performances by guest DJs and musicians including musician Solange Knowles.
Thomas has created murals for public spaces including at Brooklyn's Barclays Center (2012), Norton Museum of Art in Palm Beach (2013), and the U.S. Embassy in Dakar (2016). In 2016 Thomas also produced a video work featuring influential Black female figures for an electronic billboard with Standard Vision in Los Angeles.