Adkins was an interdisciplinary artist whose practice included sculpture, performance, video, and photography. His artworks were often inspired by, dedicated to, or referred to musicians or musical instruments; specific installations and exhibitions were sometimes labeled "recitals." Sometimes, these arrangements of sculptures were "activated" in performances by Adkins' collaborative performance group, the Lone Wolf Recital Corps. He led the Lone Wolf Recital Corps that premiering works at
ICA London,
Rote Fabrik, Zurich,
New World Symphony, Miami,
P.S.1 MOMA, and
ICA Philadelphia. Many of his works draw from the biographies of little known historical figures; his 2011 exhibition
Nutjuitok (Polar Star) is based on the life of a black Arctic explorer named
Matthew Henson who reached the North Pole with
Robert Peary at the turn of the 20th century. In other cases, Adkins' works focus on obscure details in the lives of seminal figures such as the African American writer, activist and sociologist
W.E.B. Du Bois, whose famous speech "Socialism and the American Negro" (1960) is invoked in the 2003–2008 installation
Darkwater Record. Adkins' work has been exhibited at museums and galleries worldwide, including the
Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and is in the collections of the
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; the
Studio Museum in Harlem; the
Pérez Art Museum Miami, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
Museum of Modern Art in New York; and the
Tate Modern in London. In 2012 he had a major retrospective at the
Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at
Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. His work was also featured at
P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center (now
MoMA PS1) in Queens, the LedisFlam Gallery in Brooklyn and elsewhere.
Exhibitions Adkins had work in many exhibitions over the years. Early on, Adkins's art went international with work featured at Project Binz 39 in Zurich in 1986, and at Salama-Caro Gallery in London in 1987. In 1995 Adkins showed work at the
Whitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris in New York, and in 1997 at the International Gallery at the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Adkins also had a show in 1999 at the
Institute of Contemporary Art at
University of Pennsylvania. In 2006 his work "Darkwater", a celebration of W.E.B. Dubois, was featured at Gallery 51 at
Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) in the
Berkshires. A short time later, Adkins was included in the 2008
NeoHooDoo: Art for a Forgotten Faith exhibition at MoMA PS1 in New York, which explored ritual and spirituality in art and was organized in collaboration with Houston's
Menil Collection. Adkins went international again in 2009, displaying work in Gallery of the American Academy at
American Academy in Rome, Italy. In 2012 The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery (tang) at
Skidmore College in New York hosted a retrospective of Adkins's work in a show called "Recital", including sculpture, video, and photography that honors a number of iconic historical figures and the lesser-known parts of their personal histories. The following year Adkins was featured in the 2013 exhibition
Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at the
Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. Next, at the 2015
Venice Biennale, a sculpture he created from found musical instruments was included in ''All The World's Futures,'' an exhibition curated by
Okwui Enwezor that centered on social practice in art. In 2021, the
Frist Art Museum presented
Terry Adkins: Our Sons and Daughters Ever on the Altar, an exhibition of Adkins' sculpture, prints and video works. In 2023, Adkins' work was included in the exhibition and related catalogue of
Spirit in the Land, a show looking into human interconnection with natural worlds and ecologies organized by the
Nasher Museum of Art at
Duke University, in
Durham. The group exhibition is traveling to the
Pérez Art Museum Miami, in 2024.
Works in Exhibitions The art exhibition "Nenuphar," features various sculptures and mixed media artworks by Terry Adkins, held at the Salon 94 gallery, located in New York City, in 2014. This art exhibition was to showcase similarities between two very different men:
Yves Klein, the French Nouveau Réaliste, and the American
George Washington Carver, who was born a slave but went on to become a renowned agricultural chemist, inventor and educator, he also became a musician, painter and creator of dyes and pigments. This exhibition shows how Adkins's extensive historical research revealed loose connections related to botany, music and the nautical, but more importantly his linking of the two men resulted in some arresting works that sparked a satisfy-ing frisson (Ruble, 2014: 154–155). This subject matter of Adkins work helps us understand more of the thought process into his work. Adkins' sculpture "Last Trumpet" was prominently featured at the
Museum of Modern Art's Artist’s Choice:
Grace Wales Bonner's "Spirit Movers" exhibition in 2024. Ruby City has
Bouquet, 2000, permanently on view.
Awards • 2009
Rome Prize • 2008
USA Fellows ==Death and legacy==