
Eshu (The Trickster)
<p><em>Eshu (The Trickster)</em> was inspired by a trip that Betye Saar took in 1970 to Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History with friend and fellow artist David Hammons. Impressed with the multitude of African objects she encountered, Saar returned home to start a new series of what she referred to as “ritual pieces.” To create this assemblage, Saar adhered fabric to a found leather support. “When I saw the main shape,” Saar reflected, “I knew I wanted to create a body.” She traced the contours of her own hands and feet in paint onto the surface to conjure an abstract version of Eshu, the trickster god of the Yoruba people of West Africa, who lends his name to the piece. By integrating her own body, Saar claimed her role as “a medium, the connection between the material and the message.”</p> <p>Saar began her career as a printmaker in Los Angeles in the 1960s, incorporating metaphysical elements from a wide range of sources including phrenology, palm reading, and astrology. In the 1970s she started to incorporate imagery from Africa and the African diaspora, creating iconic works such as her assemblage The Liberation of Aunt Jemima (1972; Berkeley Art Museum) that appropriated racially offensive characters of the Jim Crow era to evoke and debunk stereotypes associated with blackness.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1971
- Dimensions
- 102.2 × 96.5 × 0.6 cm (40 1/4 × 38 × 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Betye Saar
Artist

Betye Saar is an American artist working primarily in assemblage, collage, and mixed media who emerged in the 1960s to create politically charged works that reclaim and subvert racist imagery and stereotypes. Her practice draws on found objects, photographs, and ephemera to construct layered, often box-like compositions that expose the violence of systemic racism while celebrating African American resilience and spiritual practice. Her work has engaged with the occult, folk traditions, and domestic spaces as sites of resistance and cultural memory. Based in Los Angeles, Saar's practice spans five decades of rigorous formal experimentation alongside uncompromising social critique.
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More by Betye Saar
The Invitation
1991 · Photomechanical reproductions pasted on fabric mounted on paper, with fan, tin ex-voto heart, feather, and wood hearts, in hinged wood shadow box
"Keep for Old Memiors"
1976 · Pencil on paper, printed papers, and printed fabric sewn and pasted on fabric with lace, leaves, and feathers, mounted on painted frame with gloves
Aunt Jemima and Hoo Doo Doll
1972 · Marker, pencil, stamped ink, and solvent transfer on torn and painted paper
Black Girl's Window
1969 · Wooden window frame with paint, cut-and-pasted printed and painted papers, daguerreotype, lenticular print, and plastic figurine
The Mystic Galaxy
1968 · Etching with embossing
Winter Symbol
1966 · Etching
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Betye Saar
- Year
- 1971
- Dimensions
- 102.2 × 96.5 × 0.6 cm (40 1/4 × 38 × 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1971-048853
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





