PATRON SAINTS
OF A BLACK BOY
RASHAUN RUCKER
Exhibition on view at M Contemporary Art
September 25 - October 25, 2025
Reception & Artist Talk with Mario Moore:
Thursday, October 9th | 6 - 8 PM
"I am looking to find an innovative language that would serve my desire to study a more focused area of black American culture that intersects at religion, the deep south, and personal family histories.
These works hope to specifically address what I term being “Covered in Black”. When I speak on being covered, I am talking about the prayers, pleadings, and rituals that are practiced in the black community to offer a protection of those in the family and communities. Some of these practices are calling on the ancestors, the laying on of hands, alter calls, morning prayers, and the never-ending river of advice given to black people on how-to live-in blackness safely. The work is also considering who my personal saints are and trying to find God in people. "
- Rashaun Rucker
Will the Circle be Unbroken, 2023 • Graphite and colored pencil on Stonehenge paper • 50 x 35 inches
Call and Response, 2023 • Mixed media and tambourine • Diameter: 8 inches
When Grace Was Sufficient and a House Was a Home, 2023 • Mixed media and cross • 10 x 6 inches
Make a Joyful Noise, 2023 • Mixed media and tambourine • Diameter: 8 inches
Waiting on Salvation, 2023 • Graphite and colored pencil on Stonehenge paper • 50 x 35 inches
In My Father's House There are Many Mansions, 2023 • Graphite and colored pencil on Stonehenge paper • 50 x 35 inches
What Grandma Told Me, 2023 • Hymnal board and mixed media • 33 x 18 inches
What Aunt Tump Told Me, 2023 • Hymnal board and mixed media • 33 x 18 inches
You Don't Have to go to Church to Get to Know Your God, 2023 • Baptismal font, lenticular print and mixed media • 34 x 24 inches
I Brought You Black Flowers Because You are Beautiful, 2023 • Mixed media and holy fount • 18 x 12 inches
In Patron Saints of a Black Boy, Detroit-based artist Rashaun Rucker connects Christian iconography, Black spirituality, and notions of ancestry. The works in the exhibition testify to the legacy of Black people within the Christian tradition, highlighting personal histories while exploring the complexities of representation in religious imagery. Rucker’s sculpture, mixed media works, and photographs exemplify what he calls being “covered in Black”—being protected by “the prayers, pleadings, and rituals practiced in the Black community, including calling on the ancestors, the laying on of hands, altar calls, morning prayers, and a never-ending river of advice.”
Rucker’s heavily ornamented artworks mix symbols from medieval European Christianity and 19th-century Black American churches and spirituality. In You Don’t Have to Go to Church to Get Your God (2024), he appropriates a font —a vessel containing Holy Water typically positioned near the entrance of a Catholic church to remind worshipers of their baptisms. Fonts are typically crowned by a crucifix, angel, or symbolically significant animal; Rucker’s features a cross covered in crystals and rhinestones and displays, at its center, a lenticular black-and-white photographic print that shows an image of Black Christ or an image of his maternal grandfather, James Mansel, depending on the angle at which you view it. This oscillation challenges the distinction between the veneration of the two figures. Both images are vignetted into ellipses and blurred at the edges in a manner suggestive of a halo.
Central to Rucker’s inquiry is the idea of family as a source of spiritual guidance and inspiration. He invites viewers to reflect on the profound influence of family ties and ancestral legacies on individual identities and belief systems, even as he challenges traditional representations of religious concepts and figures. For example, In My Father’s House Are Many Mansions (2023) references medieval Christian reliquaries: exquisitely crafted and sumptuous containers for saints’ remains that served as focal points for veneration and pilgrimage. Replacing their typical depictions of saints’ lives with images of his own family members (whom he calls his “personal saints”), Rucker reenvisions these objects as embodiments of resilience, strength, and grace. Representing his family members also addresses the absence of Black figures in historic Christian iconography, offering reinterpretations that celebrate Blackness and—as Rucker puts it— “find God in people.” In Patron Saints of a Black Boy, the divine and the familial converge, offering a poignant reflection on the complexities of faith, heritage, identity, and belonging in the Black experience.
-Phillip A. Townsend, PhD, Curator of Art
Art Galleries at Black Studies | UT Austin
PATRON SAINTS OF A BLACK BOY
EXHIBITION HISTORY
The Art League Gallery at South Bend Museum of Art, IN
October - January, 2024
Art Galleries at Black Studies (AGBS), TX
August - December, 2024
Projective Eye Gallery at UNC Charlotte, NC
May - June, 2025
Rashaun Rucker
Photo: CJ Benninger
Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Rashaun Rucker attended North Carolina Central University and Marygrove College. He makes photographs, prints and drawings and has won more than 40 national and state awards for his work.
In 2008, Rucker became the first African American to be named Michigan Press Photographer of the Year. The same year, he won a Natural Emmy Award for Documentary Photography on the pitbull culture in Detroit. Rucker has held numerous fellowships and residencies, including the Maynard Fellowship at Harvard in 2009; a Hearst Visiting Professional in the journalism department at the University of North Caroline-Chapel Hill in 2013; an Artist Residency at the Red Bull House of Art in 2014; Kresge Arts Fellowship in 2019; a residency at the International Studios and Curatorial Program in Brooklyn, New York in 2021; and a Mellon Fellowship at the University of Michigan Institute of Humanities in 2021.
Rucker was honored as a Modern Man by Black Enterprise Magazine in 2016 and created the original artwork for the critically acclaimed Detroit Free Press documentary 12 and Clairmount. His work was recently featured in HBO’s celebrated series Random Acts of Flyness and Native Son. In 2019, Rucker was awarded the Red Bull Arts Detroit Micro Grant followed by A Sustainable Arts Foundation Award in 2020 and a Visual Arts Grant by the Harpo Foundation in 2021.
Currently, Rucker is pursuing an MFA in print media at Cranbrook Academy of Art. His diverse work is represented in numerous public and private collections.