Neckles’ practice takes an interdisciplinary approach. Grenadian folklore, Afro-Caribbean diasporic storytelling, to West African philosophy inform the ways in which ideas on womanhood, matriarchy, spirituality, astrophysics, memory, to home, fuse in her work. She created this character to fill a void—frustrated by the lack of positive representations of herself in children's literature. In 2017, Neckles’ work was presented as part of the group exhibition
Race and Revolution: Still Separate - Still Unequal at
Smack Mellon (New York). Her work
Primary I (2004) is described by writer Seph Rodney as a small black puppet, a combination of a jigaboo figure and a faceless S&M character, with a horn extending out from the back of its head—a caricature of how some see black children through racist and fetishistic lenses. For her solo exhibition
Provenance at
Five Myles Gallery in 2019, Neckles exhibited print series featuring a liminal figure maneuvering through space with a house structure worn as a mask / headdress. The house structure was a replication of the artist's maternal family home in Grenada, West Indies. Using mixed media techniques of collage and embroidery, the artist explored concepts of past and present-day colonialism, and notions of provenance as it relates to origin, authorship, and ownership. These figures were also the protagonists of Neckles’ presentation at the 58th
Venice Biennial’s Grenada Pavilion. This presentation featured her memories about the immigration of her family from Grenada to Brooklyn, New York in the 1960s and 70s. Many of the materials of the installation spoke to impermanence—as the art itself over time degraded and disappeared. In her earlier work, Neckles produced artist books on political themes such as the 1983 American invasion of
Grenada (
Operation Urgent Fury); the threatening sensation of a computer cursor placed over the image of a soldier (
A Soldier’s Story); and
Thread-n-tru; among others. In the
6@30 exhibition catalog, published by Flushing Town Hall, the writer E.A.Durden noted: “Neckles reminds us that the events we allow to happen and the stories we choose to tell, versus those we choose to deny create layers of our present moment and our future as well.” == Collaborative projects ==