(Music Playing) (Silence) There's lots of levels on which my paintings can be approached. (Pause) One can approach it as simply an object that has a certain kind of beauty. (Pause) One can approach it as (Pause) an object that has a text in it that has different levels of legibility. (Pause) If one knows James Baldwin and realizes that the text in my painting is from an essay that he's written, then that opens up the painting; gives it a different level of meaning. (Pause) The paintings that address the Million Man March were made in the mid '90's, a couple of years after Louis Farrakahn, the leader of the Nation of Islam organized a march on the mall in Washington, D.C. about the visibility and presence of black men in the country, which I find rather ironic, since black people have been in this country since the beginning before there was even a country (Pause) but we still feel the need to assert our personhood. (Pause) The irony of this march, perhaps, was that black women were encouraged to absent themselves from work, but not to attend the march as full participants. (Pause) When I started to think about making silk-screen paintings using images of the march, this kind of notion of absence or disappearance of women was something I was interested in and something I tried to find in the images themselves. (Pause) Like any artwork, things become richer if you know more about them, but I don't think that's crucial. Someone can walk into a museum and not know a single thing about a Jackson Pollock painting and still have a reaction to it; still get something from it. The thing that they get from it may be richer if they know more about it, but that's like anything (laughter), you know, that's about being in the world. (Silence) (Music Playing)