Join The Collection to save, track, and explore works like this.

Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts — I come alone
Deborah Roberts

I come alone

2023

In "I come alone" (2023), Deborah Roberts presents a monumental 177.8 by 177.8 centimetre canvas dense with acrylic, graphite, pastel, ink, and collage, constructing a figure that commands space rather than merely occupying it. A young Black boy fills the picture plane almost entirely, his body cropped and fragmented against a spare white ground that, rather than diminishing him, throws his presence into sharp relief. His hands are raised toward the top of the canvas, left fingers gripping the right thumb in a gesture that carries a double weight: the shadow of precriminalization and the documented violence visited upon Black boys by American law enforcement, and simultaneously a posture of self-possession, of a body that belongs entirely to itself. Roberts does not resolve this tension so much as insist that both truths coexist, and the scale of the work ensures that neither reading can be absorbed quickly or comfortably. The piece was made for Roberts' 2023 solo exhibition "What about us?" and reflects a deliberate expansion, formally and conceptually, from her earlier compositions. During the COVID period Roberts began allowing her figures to grow heroic in scale, reducing the surrounding white field as the bodies grew too large and too assured to require its framing. The result here is a figure who does not perform for an outside gaze but occupies his own interior world with growing confidence and self-recognition. For collectors, this work represents Roberts at a pivotal moment in her practice, one in which the political urgency that has always animated her collaged portraits finds expression in a new formal ambition. Signed and framed, it carries the full weight of one of the most significant voices currently working at the intersection of identity, childhood, and American social history.

Medium
Acrylic, graphite, pastel, ink and collage on canvas
Overall
Framed
Signed
Yes
Location
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London

Start the Discussion

Request access to join the discussion

Spotted works by Deborah Roberts

About this work

Deborah Roberts, I come alone, 2023

In "I come alone" (2023), Deborah Roberts presents a monumental 177.8 by 177.8 centimetre canvas dense with acrylic, graphite, pastel, ink, and collage, constructing a figure that commands space rather than merely occupying it. A young Black boy fills the picture plane almost entirely, his body cropped and fragmented against a spare white ground that, rather than diminishing him, throws his presence into sharp relief. His hands are raised toward the top of the canvas, left fingers gripping the right thumb in a gesture that carries a double weight: the shadow of precriminalization and the documented violence visited upon Black boys by American law enforcement, and simultaneously a posture of self-possession, of a body that belongs entirely to itself. Roberts does not resolve this tension so much as insist that both truths coexist, and the scale of the work ensures that neither reading can be absorbed quickly or comfortably. The piece was made for Roberts' 2023 solo exhibition "What about us?" and reflects a deliberate expansion, formally and conceptually, from her earlier compositions. During the COVID period Roberts began allowing her figures to grow heroic in scale, reducing the surrounding white field as the bodies grew too large and too assured to require its framing. The result here is a figure who does not perform for an outside gaze but occupies his own interior world with growing confidence and self-recognition. For collectors, this work represents Roberts at a pivotal moment in her practice, one in which the political urgency that has always animated her collaged portraits finds expression in a new formal ambition. Signed and framed, it carries the full weight of one of the most significant voices currently working at the intersection of identity, childhood, and American social history.

Medium
Acrylic, graphite, pastel, ink and collage on canvas
Dimensions
overall: 177.8 x 177.8 cm • framed: 182.1 x 182.2 cm
Year
2023
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London

More works by Deborah Roberts

Collected by

Sebastián Naranjo