Spotlight on Kara Walker: 
Transformation in Silhouette
Picture of Kara Walker. Black women wearing a black shirt with white design. studio international, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons
Artist Spotlight: Kara Walker
  • Kara Walker is an Black artist famous for her large-scale silhouette installations.
  • Her art uses black cut-paper silhouettes against white walls to tell stories of history, identity, and transformation.
  • The sharp contrast of black and white in her work reflects themes of light and shadow, presence and absence.
  • Her work invites viewers to explore complex narratives within simple forms.
 art done with black figures on a white backgroundThe Means to an End--A Shadow Drama in Five Acts, etching and aquatint by Kara Walker, 5 panels, 1995, Honolulu Museum of ArtActivity: Create Your Own Silhouette Story
Objective: Students create black-and-white silhouette art representing Earth’s transformation through oxygen.

Materials:
  • Black construction paper
  • White paper or cardstock background
  • Scissors
  • Glue sticks
  • Optional: white crayons or gel pens for details
Instructions:
  • Discuss the Great Oxygenation Event briefly and show examples of Kara Walker’s silhouettes.
  • Ask learners to think about “before oxygen” (dark, simple) and “after oxygen” (light, complex).
  • Have learners cut shapes to represent life forms, atmosphere, or symbolic images of transformation.
  • Arrange and glue silhouettes on the white paper to create a dramatic scene of change.

Discussion Questions
  • How does Kara Walker’s use of black and white help tell a story about change?
  • What could the black parts represent about early Earth before oxygen?
  • How might the white parts symbolize the arrival of oxygen and complex life?
  • Why do you think simple silhouettes can tell such complex stories?
Extension Ideas
  • Explore other artists who use contrast or silhouettes to tell stories,