Sondra Perry is an interdisciplinary artist who works with video, computer-based media, and performance. She explores themes of race, identity, family history, and technology.
Perry's work investigates "blackness, black femininity, African American heritage" and the portrayal or representation of black people throughout history, often centering on the way blackness influences technology and image making. Perry explores the duality of intelligence and seductivity in the contexts of black family heritage, black history, and black femininity. "Perry is committed to net neutrality and ideas of collective production and action, using open source software to edit her work and leasing it digitally for use in galleries and classrooms, while also making all her videos available for free online. This principle of open access in Perry’s practice aims to privilege black life, to democratise access to art and culture, and to offer a critical platform that differentiates itself from the portrayal of blackness in the media".
Black Girl as a Landscape (2010)
In Perry's single channel video installation, Black Girl as a Landscape, the camera slowly pans over the silhouette of a horizontally framed girl, abstracting her body. This is said to reflect Perry's interest in how abstraction might create a dimensionality that connects an individual body with larger ecologies, both visual and environmental.
This photo series depicts Perry's grandparents in their backyard obscured by smoke bombs. The photographs reflect the physical destruction seen in cities such as Washington and Chicago during the race riots of 1919, referred to as Red Summer.
Double Quadruple Etcetera Etcetera I (2013)
Exhibited at the Studio Museum in Harlem, Double Quadruple Etcetera Etcetera I showcases a 30-second loop of a man dancing in a white room looped over 9 minutes. The video was also featured in the Seattle Art Museum's show Disguise: Masks and Global African Art, which toured at the Fowler Museum at UCLA and the Brooklyn Museum in New York, after its Seattle debut. 42 Black Panther Balloons on 125th Street With an eye for both the humorous and the political, Perry created 42 Black Panther Balloons on 125th Street, in which she carried a bunch of mylar black panther balloons around town. One still shows the balloons held on a street corner in such a way that it both obscures the person holding them and merges with them to become what is described as on awkward and politically charged body. Some of the same kind of balloons are used in her single channel Youtube video, Black Panther Cam, of a smaller cluster of black panther mylar balloons floating in the artist's studio.
Lineage for a Multiple Monitor Workstation: Number One (2015)
This 26 minute two channel video depicts identity as a construction that can be explored through ritual. Perry developed this piece as a narrative about her family, and includes family memories that are edited between song clips and computer effects.
Resident Evil (2016)
Exhibited at The Kitchen in New York, NY. The show featured the video which juxtaposes images of the "blue screen of death", law enforcement's "blue wall of silence", police raids, photos of black women who have died in the custody of police, Bill Gates dancing, and an avatar of Perry. The exhibit also featured Graft and Ash for a Three Monitor Workstation. The piece is an exercise bike with a triptych of screens attached. From the screens, Perry's avatar tells the viewer of a scientific study in which those black people who believe the world is fair are more prone to chronic illnesses. Resident Evil is the titular video from the exhibit which examines the media's take on blackness. There is footage of the 2015 riots after the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore. One of the protestors yells at Geraldo Rivera for covering the protests and not the circumstances of Freddie Gray's death. Later on, Perry enters her family home with Eartha Kitt singing "I Want to Be Evil" on the television.
Eclogue For Inhabitability (2017)
In 2017 Perry won the Gwendolyn Knight and Jacob Lawrence Prize, for which she presented her solo exhibition Eclogue For Inhabitability at the Seattle Art Museum. The prize included this solo exhibition, as well as a $10,000 grant. This was the first time in the history of the prize that a video artist had been awarded.
Typhoon coming on (2018)
Perry exhibited a new soundscape at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery to accompany an adapted version of her piece Wet and Wavy Looks – Typhoon coming on, inspired by JMW Turner's painting of The Slave Ship. The video begins with an animated ocean which then transitions into a digitally adapted segment of Turner's painting. The piece was created using the open source animation software Blender.