Carrie’s work is defined by its 21st century sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Emmett Till
Carrie Iverson American, born 1972

Black and Tanned Your Whipped Wind of Change Howled Low Blowing Itself - Ha - Smack into the Middle of Duke Ellington's Orchestra Billie Heard It Too & Cried Strange Fruit Tears
Carrie Mae Weems American, born 1953

Untitled (Man and Mirror), from the "Kitchen Table Series"
Carrie Mae Weems American, born 1953

Christ Carrying the Cross
Master of the Worcester Carrying of the Cross (active c. 1400–c. 1450)

Las Bebidas
Carrie Schneider American, born 1979

For Your Names You Took Hope and Humble
Carrie Mae Weems American, born 1953

Christ Carrying the Cross
Sebastiano del Piombo (Italian, c. 1485–1547)

Carrying Cloth
Provincial Inca Peru, south coast, Rio Grande Valley

Christ Carrying the Cross
Master of the Freising Visitation (German, active 1451–1490)

Christ Carrying the Cross
Attributed to Hans Maler (German, c. 1480–by 1529)

My Father Went to War
Carrie Mae Weems American, born 1953

Monk Carrying Woman
Probably after a model by Guillaume Dupré (French, about 1574–1642) Possibly the workshop of Claude Bertélemy (French, 1525–1626) Fontainebleau or Avon, France

The Fallen Caryatid Carrying Her Stone
Auguste Rodin (French, 1840–1917)

Bathers and a Woman Carrying a Basket
Miguel Covarrubias Mexican, 1904-1957

Old Beggar Carrying Child
Simon Troger (Austrian, 1683–1768)

Beauty Carrying a Wedding Decoration
Nishimura Shigenobu Japanese, active c. 1723-47

Cupid Carrying a Swan
Venetian

Fragment from Christ Carrying the Cross: Mourning Virgin
Jean Hey (Master of Moulins; Netherlandish, active in France, c. 1480-c.1504)