Raymond Saunders: Post No Bills

Publisher: David Zwirner Books

Publication Date: 2025

Introduction by Ebony L. Haynes. Texts by Jarrett Earnest, Darby English, Richard J. Powell, and Raymond Saunders. Interview with Raymond Saunders by Judith Wilson. Conversation between Thelma Golden and Ebony L. Haynes

Forthcoming September 2025  Discover Raymond Saunders’s dynamic paintings and his extraordinary legacy as an artist and thinker in his first monograph.

Saunders’s work brings together his extensive formal training with his own observations and lived experience. His assemblage-style paintings frequently begin with a monochromatic black ground elaborated with white chalk—a pointed reversal of the traditional figure-ground relationship. He subsequently adds a range of other markings, materials, and talismans, such as wallpaper and advertisements, rulers and paintbrushes. Expressionistic swaths of paint, minimalist motifs, line drawings, and passages of vibrant color tangle with found objects, signs, and doors collected from his physical surroundings at home and abroad, creating unexpected visual rhymes and resonances that reward careful and sustained looking. At once deliberately constructed and improvisatory, didactic and deeply felt, these richly built surfaces conjure a range of themes, allowing for a nuanced multiplicity of meanings.   Documenting a two-part exhibition presented at David Zwirner and Andrew Kreps Gallery in 2024, this publication illuminates Saunders’s ability to infuse his work with social relevance and commentary. Included is a conversation between curator Ebony Haynes and the Studio Museum of Harlem director Thelma Golden about Golden’s multidecade engagement with Saunders’s artwork and writing. A facsimile of Saunders's self-published pamphlet from 1967, Black Is a Color—his vital essay on the creative expression of the artist, which continues to spark cultural conversation more than five decades later—is reproduced alongside new annotated commentary by the art historian Darby English. An essay by Jarrett Earnest offers an in-depth interpretation of two of Saunders’s complex chalkboard works. Also included is a previously unpublished interview from 1980 between the artist and Judith Wilson, in which Saunders discusses his multilayered practice. Lastly, a pivotal text from 1993 by the art historian Richard J. Powell offers a panoramic examination of Saunders’s art from 1968 to 1993, with a special focus on his iconic painting Dr. Jesus. This robust group of texts and academic considerations offers a compelling exploration of Saunders’s wide-ranging practice and lasting influence.

Details

Publisher: David Zwirner Books

Artist: Raymond Saunders

Contributors: Jarrett Earnest, Darby English, Thelma Golden, Ebony L. Haynes, Richard J. Powell, Judith Wilson

Publication Date: 2025

ISBN: 9781644231654

Retail: $75 | $100 CAN | £60

Status: Not Yet Published

Designer: Morcos Key (Jon Key, Ana Valeria Castillos)

Binding: Hardcover

Dimensions: 9.5 × 12 in | 24.1 × 30.5 cm

Pages: 208

Reproductions: 84 illustrations

Artist and Contributors

Raymond Saunders

In his assemblage-style paintings, American artist Raymond Saunders (b. 1934) brings together his extensive formal training with his own observations and lived experience. Expressionistic swaths of paint, minimalist motifs, line drawings, and passages of vibrant color tangle with found objects, signs, and doors collected from his urban environment, creating unexpected visual rhymes and resonances that reward careful and sustained looking and allow for a vast and nuanced multiplicity of meanings.

Jarrett Earnest

Jarrett Earnest is the author of What it Means to Write About Art: Interviews with Art Critics (2018) and Valid Until Sunset (2023) as well as editor of The Young and Evil: Queer Modernism in New York, 1930–1955 (2020), Painting Is a Supreme Fiction: Writings by Jesse Murry, 1980–1993 (2021), and Devotion: today’s future becomes tomorrow archive (2022). His criticism has been published in magazines and exhibition catalogues around the world and appears regularly in the New York Review of Books.

Darby English

Darby English is the Carl Darling Buck Professor of Art History at the University of Chicago.

Thelma Golden

Thelma Golden is an American art curator and the director and chief curator of The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York.

Ebony L. Haynes

Ebony L. Haynes is a writer and curator from Toronto. She is based in New York, where she is a senior director at David Zwirner and curator of 52 Walker.

Richard J. Powell

Richard J. Powell is a writer, curator, and John Spencer Bassett Distinguished Professor of Art and Art History at Duke University.

Judith Wilson

Judith Wilson is an African American art historian and professor in San Francisco, California.

$75