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Two women standing and smiling in front of a framed painting in a gallery. One has curly gray hair, wearing a patterned skirt; the other has straight brown hair, wearing a sleeveless top.
National Museum of Women in the Arts

American Collection #4: Jo Baker’s Bananas

A colorful quilt depicts the same woman across its upper register five times: she has medium-dark skin tone and dances, bare-breasted and wearing a skirt with bananas hanging from her waist as well as a set of yellow necklaces. Below, medium-dark skinned and light-skinned men and women interact and play brass instruments. The quilt’s background features patterns in red, green, and yellow, and a border in shades of orange, blue, and black surrounds the work.
Faith Ringgold, American Collection #4: Jo Baker’s Bananas, 1997; Acrylic on canvas with pieced fabric border, 80 1/2 x 76 in.; National Museum of Women in the Arts; Museum purchase: Funds donated by the Estate of Barbara Bingham Moore, Olga V. Hargis Family Trusts, and the Members’ Acquisition Fund; © 2023 Faith Ringgold/Artists Rights Society, New York, Courtesy of ACA Galleries, New York; Photo by Lee Stalsworth
Close up of American Collection #4: Jo Baker’s Bananas
A colorful quilt depicts the same woman across its upper register five times: she has medium-dark skin tone and dances, bare-breasted and wearing a skirt with bananas hanging from her waist as well as a set of yellow necklaces. Below, medium-dark skinned and light-skinned men and women interact and play brass instruments. The quilt’s background features patterns in red, green, and yellow, and a border in shades of orange, blue, and black surrounds the work.

Jo Baker’s Bananas is the fourth work out of eleven in Faith Ringgold’s “American Collection” (1997), a series of story quilts about Marlena, a fictional Black artist. In Ringgold’s narrative, Marlena was born into affluence in Paris to Black American artist Willa Marie (protagonist of Ringgold’s “The French Collection” series) and Pierre François Simone, a white Frenchman. Following Simone’s death, Marlena and her brother are sent to the US, where Marlena becomes a successful artist.

Jo Baker’s Bananas depicts a celebration for Marlena’s exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Her painting of Jazz Age performer Josephine Baker, topless and clad in a banana skirt, repeated five times as though dancing across the canvas, hangs above Marlena (the dark-skinned figure in the black dress). At the same time, Marlena struggles to break into a conversation between her brother (the light-skinned man) and a white socialite. In the background, two jazz musicians play. Ringgold offers a thoughtful meditation on the invisibility of Black women in the art world: Although Marlena and Baker are being celebrated, both are ignored, reflective of Ringgold’s own experiences.

Artwork Details

  • Artist

    Faith Ringgold
  • Title

    American Collection #4: Jo Baker’s Bananas
  • Date

    1997
  • Medium

    Acrylic on canvas with pieced fabric border
  • Dimensions

    80 1/2 x 76 in.
  • Donor Credit

    Museum purchase: Funds donated by the Estate of Barbara Bingham Moore, Olga V. Hargis Family Trusts, and the Members’ Acquisition Fund
  • Image Credit

    © 2023 Faith Ringgold/Artists Rights Society, New York, Courtesy of ACA Galleries, New York; Photo by Lee Stalsworth
  • On Display

    Yes