Twin Cities artist Leslie Barlow remembers wandering the hallways of the Minneapolis Institute of Art as a child and discovering the 1856 painting "Peace Concluded" by Sir John Everett Millais. The family portrait shows a white, British family gathered in a cozy living room setting while the father, a wounded war veteran, reads a newspaper announcing the end of the Crimean War.
The portrait would stick in her mind. It was the first she had ever seen, but the family in it looked nothing like hers.
Barlow, who identifies as Black mixed-race, grew up in south Minneapolis and lives not far from there now. At 31, she is reflecting on the present moment and looking to the future, where her vision of what families look like is part of the canon. Her Minnesota Artists Exhibition Program (MAEP) solo exhibition "Leslie Barlow: Within, Between, and Beyond," opening July 16 at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, includes 16 paintings of people or families who identify as mixed-race or transracial adoptees. They are accompanied by video interviews with the subjects, made by artist Ryan Stopera (who is also Barlow's partner). By centering narratives from marginalized people, the exhibition pushes back against the whiteness and Eurocentricity that dominate art history and pop culture.
Last summer, following George Floyd's killing by Minneapolis police, Barlow and artists from Public Functionary Studios and Studio 400, its incubator for young artists of color, participated in #CreativesAfterCurfew, a decentralized collective that painted murals focused on the demand for the end of racial inequality, the start of police abolition and recognition of #AllBlackLivesMatter.
Barlow is a 2021 Jerome Hill Artist fellow, a 2019 McKnight Visual Artist fellow and a 20/20 Springboard Fellowship winner, with works in the permanent collections of the Weisman Art Museum, Minnesota Museum of American Art and U.S. Bank Stadium. She also founded and leads Studio 400.
For the MAEP show, you expanded your subjects beyond mixed-race people and into transracial adoptees. How did that shift occur?
It wasn't really a shift. Adoptees have been in my work from the beginning. There is adoption in my extended family and in friends' and families more, so it is actually about naming it. Transnational or transracial adoptees means people adopted by families of a different national or racial identity than their own. They often navigate complex layers of policing and identity erasure that emerge within the mixed-race umbrella. I'm interested in amplifying experiences you wouldn't see in portraiture. As someone with a white mother, I can connect with being labeled as an adoptee.
What's your family background?
My dad is Black and from Chicago and moved to Minnesota after he married my mom, who was born and raised in Fridley and is a first-generation immigrant. Her mom immigrated here from Denmark. So she's white but had a particular experience of navigating a mother who doesn't speak English fluently. I have two younger brothers — Nathan, 30, and Daniel, 27. I'm glued to the Upper Midwest. I did my BFA at University of Wisconsin-Stout, and my MFA at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Like most Black folks, I can trace my ancestry to the South.
Have you been to Denmark?
I went for the first and only time in 2019 as a part of the series I was working on, called "A Familiar Portrait of Labor and Love." I wanted to connect with both sides of my family and learn more about ancestry and have deep conversations with my grandmothers about their personal histories and stories.