Verge of Extinction

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    Photo: Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio
1994
Found tin and nails on wood
47.5 x 45.5 x 3.5 inches
Collection of
Toledo Museum of Art
Museum purchase and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation
Description

Lockett's most frequently used artistic metaphor was white American overculture's like treatment of animals and non-white peoples:

“When [white] people came [to America], they saw buffalo, and they exploited them, and they just destroyed them, because they could. They had guns; they just shot them down because they just could. They didn't really shoot them down because they had to feed theyselves; they shot them down just because they could It's wrong to destroy anything.”

If works such as Hiroshima stir together history with Black experience, the confined deer of the "Traps" series, the endangered bison of Once There Were Many, and Verge of Extinction conjoin the fate of the environment (an occasional deer still appears around the Bessemer mills) and the history of African Americans. History becomes a series of figuralisms; the fates of other peoples throughout Western history and the fates of ecosystems are the precursors of African American history.