Career

Sadie Barnette Made Art out of Her Father’s Black Panther FBI File

The artist on surveillance and the role of art in activism.

Sadie Barnette Made Art out of Her Father’s Black Panther FBI File
Anna-Alexia Basile

There are many ways one might be expected to react when reading one’s own father’s FBI file closely chronicling his activities during his time with the Black Panthers. But Sadie Barnette, who did exactly this, made them into art. She’s exhibited the work a few times already—in New York and Oakland, where she’s based—but seeing the piece (which she changes and reworks with each new show) in her studio with the artist herself was, if we’re being honest, a little bit mind-bending.

First, there’s the sheer scale of the work—pages and pages of typed material she narrowed down from the 500-page file mounted on the wall—that requires you to stand back. But as you get closer and actually read the material—that agents talked to neighbors and employers about Barnette’s father; that he was on a list that would allow the agency to detain him at any time—it becomes a completely different kind of art, but art nonetheless. Barnette always works with mixed media; she loves glitter and jewels and sparkles. Her studio—huge, airy, and in a building she shares with other artists and a family of chickens kept in a coop in the yard—is full of pop-culture ephemera, like a box of Wheaties emblazoned with Stephen Curry’s face. It’s also full of her work and works in progress, hung as it would be in a gallery. Speaking of, Barnette is giving the FBI file its next moment in the spotlight with a new solo show called Dear 1968,... at UC Davis’ Manetti Shrem Museum. If you can, you should see it—click through the gallery to find out why.


7 / 20
“It’s been a lot of highs and a lot of lows [creating the FBI file work]. It was definitely terrifying learning some of the facts within the FBI file—my dad’s name was on this list that is the emergency apprehension and detention program list. Those things were very chilling. They made me realize how lucky I am that my dad is alive. A lot of people’s names in the file were assassinated at that time, and those things made me scared and mad and sad, but also really lucky that my dad is still here. But it’s also served as a container for these conversations for me and my dad to have.

There were informants in the Black Panther meetings that are reporting back to the FBI; there were agents watching my dad get on an airplane with Angela Davis at San Francisco airport. It feels very real when you read about the fact that they knocked on all his neighbors doors, neighbors that he doesn't even remember.”

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