Die was painted during the
riots and uprisings of the 1960s and following the 1965
assassination of Malcolm X, and was finished the year before the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and the
riots that followed. As the final work in
The American People Series,
Die represents the endpoint of the series' tonal shift from optimism to violence as the early successes of the
Civil Rights Movement gave way to political assassinations and widespread bouts of violence in black communities during the summer months. Ringgold was inspired to paint the work in part by her extensive viewing of
Pablo Picasso's painting
Guernica (1937) during its longterm loan to the
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in
New York that began in 1939. The opening reception for the show was attended by
Romare Bearden and
Richard Mayhew along with hundreds of the artist's friends and family; the gallery owner set up a record player and children danced to
Motown music. The artist has referred to the work as a
mural since its original showing, despite the fact that political murals by black artists of the era were generally painted on buildings or shown in public spaces; curator
Mark Godfrey argued that this distinction was meant to communicate Ringgold's desire to bring black artists, aesthetics, and politics into traditionally white institutional art spaces. Following its original showing, Ringgold kept the work in storage along with
The American People Series #18: The Flag is Bleeding (1967) for over 40 years. Prior to 2010,
Die had only been brought out of storage for Ringgold's solo survey in 1973 at the
Rutgers University Art Gallery,
New Brunswick, New Jersey, and for
Tradition and Conflict: Images of a Turbulent Decade, 1963-1967 (1985) at the
Studio Museum in Harlem. The work was shown at Ringgold's retrospective
American People, Black Light (2010) at the
Neuberger Museum of Art,
Purchase, New York, which traveled in 2013 to the
National Museum of Women in the Arts,
Washington, D.C. Following the retrospective, the work was shown in several exhibitions, including
Post-Picasso: Contemporary Reactions (2014) at the
Museu Picasso,
Barcelona, and the original showing of
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power (2017) at the
Tate Modern,
London. MoMA acquired the painting in 2016 directly from Ringgold and subsequently showed it in the museum next to Picasso's painting ''
Les Demoiselles D'Avignon (1907) starting in 2019. Die'' was featured in the original showing of Ringgold's retrospective
Faith Ringold: American People (2022) at the
New Museum, New York, and at Ringgold's first retrospective in France,
Faith Ringgold: Black is Beautiful (2023) at the
Musée Picasso,
Paris. ==Reception==