Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Museums & Heritage
news

Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles acquires Kara Walker sculpture made from dissected Confederate monument

Walker’s “Unmanned Drone” is a centrepiece of “Monuments”, a landmark exhibition at Moca and The Brick

Benjamin Sutton
24 February 2026
Share
Kara Walker, Unmanned Drone, 2023 The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Purchase with funds provided by Beth Swofford by exchange. © Kara Walker. Photo by Fredrik Nilsen.

Kara Walker, Unmanned Drone, 2023 The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Purchase with funds provided by Beth Swofford by exchange. © Kara Walker. Photo by Fredrik Nilsen.

The Museum of Contemporary Art (Moca) in Los Angeles has acquired Unmanned Drone (2023), a towering bronze sculpture the US artist Kara Walker made by dissecting and reassembling a decommissioned statue of the Confederate general Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson. The 1921 monument, by Charles Keck, was one of two Confederate statues in Charlottesville, Virginia, that were dismantled following the “Unite the Right” rally of white nationalists in 2017.

Walker’s sculpture is currently on view at the Los Angeles non-profit space The Brick as part of Monuments (until 3 May), an exhibition also on display at Moca’s Geffen Contemporary location that examines the legacy of Confederate monuments and features contemporary artists’ responses to white supremacist iconography and statuary. Kara Walker co-curated the exhibition alongside The Brick’s director Hamza Walker and Moca’s senior curator Bennett Simpson.

Kara Walker, Unmanned Drone, 2023 (detail) The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Purchase with funds provided by Beth Swofford by exchange. © Kara Walker. Photo by Fredrik Nilsen.

The Big Review

The Big Review | Monuments, The Geffen Contemporary at Moca and The Brick, Los Angeles ★★★★★

Jori Finkel

“With the acquisition of Unmanned Drone, we are honoured to steward this epic and historic sculpture by Kara Walker,” Moca’s interim director Ann Goldstein said in a statement. “A searing and crucial statement about the legacy of post-Civil War United States, it is a profound work for this moment—and for the ages.”

In her sculpture, Walker has transformed the strident monument of Jackson riding to battle on his horse Little Sorrel into a Frankensteinian figure out of a Hieronymus Bosch or Giuseppe Arcimboldo painting. Unmanned Drone is a symbolically castrated, broken jumble of human and horse limbs that seems to simultaneously be moving forward and retreating. Accompanying works by Walker at The Brick include elements of the monument that she has sand-blasted, painted and upended. Another Charlottesville monument, depicting the Confederate general Robert E. Lee, that also became a flashpoint for far-right rallies in 2017, has since been removed and melted down; its constituent elements are now on display at Moca as part of Monuments.

Cynthia Daignault, Twenty-Six Seconds, 2024 The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Purchase with funds provided by Pete and Michelle Scantland. © Cynthia Daignault. Photo by Jeff McLane

Frieze Los Angeles 2024

Paul Pfeiffer: ‘I want to preserve the intensity of the image’

Theo Belci

In addition to Walker’s Unmanned Drone, Moca has revealed more than 150 works acquired for its permanent collection last year. They include Cynthia Daignault’s 486-panel painting Twenty-Six Seconds (2024), which depicts every single frame of the infamous footage of John F. Kennedy’s assassination; the monumental installation was included in Moca’s major photorealism exhibition last year. Also joining the museum’s permanent collection is the video Red Green Blue (2022) by Paul Pfeiffer, who was the subject of an important survey exhibition at Moca in 2023-24.

Other works that have recently joined Moca’s collection and are being publicly announced this week include pieces by Shizu Saldamando, Takako Yamaguchi, Olafur Eliasson, Henry Taylor, Shizu Saldamando, Meriem Bennani, Suzanne Jackson, Julie Mehretu, Mike Kelley and Nairy Baghramian. In a statement, Moca’s chief curator and director of curatorial affairs Clara Kim said this cohort of acquisitions “reflects a sustained and deeply collaborative effort to think critically about what it means to build a museum collection in the twenty-first century”.

Museums & HeritageMuseum acquisitionsKara WalkerMuseum of Contemporary Art Los AngelesConfederate monuments
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Exhibitionspreview
22 October 2025

Heavy in more ways than one: Confederate statues hit the road for Los Angeles exhibition

The massive, historic works at the core of “Monuments” were never meant to travel, and moving them has been an enormously complex job

Jori Finkel
Monumentsnews
8 December 2021

Confederate statue at centre of deadly Virginia rally will be melted down to make new monument

The city council in Charlottesville, Virginia, chose to give the controversial work to a local organisation over proposals to relocate it to Texas, California or other distant sites

Benjamin Sutton
Exhibitionsreview
4 October 2019

The Empire strikes back? Kara Walker's fountain makes a splash at Tate

US artist takes on British Empire’s legacy and the Transatlantic salve trade in Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall

Gareth Harris
Exhibitionspreview
20 October 2025

At a Los Angeles exhibition, contemporary artists face off with decommissioned Confederate statues

The show at the Brick and the Museum of Contemporary Art addresses the US’s fraught racial history—featuring decommissioned Confederate monuments alongside works by Kara Walker, Leonardo Drew, Torkwase Dyson and others

Tara Anne Dalbow