Black Children Under the Gaze — 3D Virtual Gallery by Emely Rocha

What does it mean to be a child? Does it mean having the ability to experience freedom without worry? Have fun, play with other children, and grow without eyes watching you 24/7? For Black children, this is rarely what they experience. From an early age, they are looked at, judged, and often misread, seen as older, less innocent, and less in need of protection than their peers. Today, you can see this again and again within the media, and it dates back to slavery. So, who is watching Black children, and what are they looking for? This curation of pieces uses Adultification Bias Theory to look at how race, class, and gender take away the safety of being a child. By mixing this with ideas about "the gaze", the exhibition explores how Black children are exploited, labeled, or forced to grow up too fast, rather than enjoy an innocent childhood. This is a form of dehumanization, which strips Black children of their innocence before they are even given the chance to experience it. Alongside this theory, the exhibition relates to Bell Hooks' quote, 'There is power in looking.' Historically, that power has belonged to the white gaze, a gaze that has controlled, labeled, and exploited Black children. If there is power in looking, then who has held that power over Black children, and what have they used it for? Together, these ideas show that every image of a Black child can become intersectional. It is shaped by more than one kind of gaze, but by multiple simultaneously. There is historical, social, and personal context that all contribute to this current issue. The exhibition is curated in chronological order. It opens with Kara Walker's A Subtlety, which looks back to the issue in slavery, showing how Black children were historically seen as labor and product rather than as individuals deserving protection. Following Walker's piece is Carrie Mae Weems' Untitled (Colored People Grid), which shows how these racist scripts became systemized, sorting and labeling Black children by color before they had any say in how they were seen. Next, Kerry James Marshall's School of Beauty, School of Culture. This piece moves into a beauty salon, a space where children absorb beauty standards simply by being there, shaping how they see themselves and how others see them. Then we look at Njideka Akunyili Crosby's "The Beautiful Ones" Series #9, which adds to the conversation on a global scale, showing a child stepping into an adult caretaking role, an example of adultification bias shaped by socioeconomic status rather than by choice. The exhibition closes with LaToya Ruby Frazier's Grandma Ruby and Me, which explores how environment, poverty, and generational hardship shape a child's life before they're even born, shaping how the adult gaze is passed down and perceived across generations.

A 3D virtual art gallery on Galerra featuring 5 artworks. Walk through the gallery in an immersive 3D experience.

View all artworks in 2D

Artworks in this gallery

About the creator

Emely Rocha on Galerra