I have attended almost all of Wangechi Mutu’s exhibitions in NYC over the years, and the effect on me, from the early pieces to the most recent bronze sculptures, has been profound. Her use of collage as an art form - one in which I once felt Hannah Hoch dominated - attained new levels of personal and political expression equal in range and breadth to exquisite and majestic paintings. These works at The New Museum closing June 6th, literally unearth the Kenyan soil - dry sand and deep red mud embodying the beauty and scourge of her homeland. Writhing cutout female figures containing imagery reminiscent of flayed animal flesh with a contagion crawling through the skin gives us a sense of what is “seen and unseen.” Mutu uses medical illustrations for one of her series of women’s faces describing death and disease - viruses brewing below the surface waiting to erupt.