Words with... / Hannah Beachler, USA
Making room
Hannah Beachler is a production designer who is best known for her Academy Award-winning work on the film Black Panther and her contributions to Beyonce’s visual album, Lemonade. It’s a CV that caught the attention of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, who recently asked Beachler to lead the curation of its newest installation. Called Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room, it reflects on the 19th-century African-American neighbourhood of Seneca Village in New York City, by merging a historic kitchen with a futuristic-looking living room. To find out more about the show and Beachler’s process, we caught up with her for a recent episode of Monocle On Design.
Tell us about the process of designing this installation.
I started with a story. As a creative person, you have a process that works for you. I call it a process – just waking up in the morning is a process – but I’ve been working as a production designer for almost 18 years now, so I’m kind of attuned to how to tell a story. That’s how I work: I visualise, create and see things as stories, no matter what it is that I’m doing.
What’s the story you’re telling in ‘Before Yesterday We Could Fly’?
I started with a woman who lived in Seneca Village, with a focus on her kitchen, which we turned into a lab with spices, symbols and spiritual items from her past. In African-American culture, there’s more to the kitchen than just cooking; it’s about culture, music and community too. But the kitchen was just one part of the story. We have a time-machine element, which is about bringing these artefacts from the past together with future artefacts in the living room. The story is that this woman is keeping important objects in a timeless place for her culture, living between the future and the past.
As an independent production designer, what was it like to work with seasoned curators at The Metropolitan Museum of Art?
It was really wonderful to have its curatorial team – Ian Alteveer, Sarah E Lawrence and Ana Matisse Donefer-Hickie – guiding me through the process. They were really knowledgeable about which artworks and time periods to focus on and include, looking at the specifics, logistics and technical aspects of curating. It meant that I could be my own little production-designer self, while also learning a lot, observing, taking it in and being a student of the curators. That’s the great thing about doing things outside your field: it allows you to be a student.
For more from Beachler, tune into ‘Monocle On Design’.