Marshall additionally scatters mirrors throughout College of Magnificence, College of Tradition, a nod to Jan van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait(1434) and Diego Velázquez’s Las Meninas (1656), two works famend for enjoying with reflection. In Van Eyck’s home scenes, a curved mirror provides viewers an expanded view of the room. In the meantime, the position of the mirror behind Velázquez’s portray reveals the reflection of King Philip IV and Queen Mariana. In Marshall’s piece, as the lady on the centre poses, supposedly for the viewer, the mirror behind reveals the flash of a photographer’s digicam, as he raises his arms in entrance of their face to take the picture. “These are all very deliberate and direct references,” Marshall says. “However usually, for the typical individual, with none of these references, this place appears acquainted.”Â
Nods to modern black tradition are simply as prevalent within the portray. A signed poster of Lauryn Hill and one other for the UK-born artist Chris Ofili’s 2010 Tate Britain present are depicted on the partitions of the salon. On the time of the Tate exhibition, Ofili was broadly thought of probably the most well-known black artist in British historical past, although Marshall first noticed Ofili’s work in New York earlier than seeing it in London. “They had been the most effective work I might ever seen as a result of they had been wealthy, advanced, and layered,” he says, including that he believes Ofili “operates on the highest degree that work may be made”.Â
For Godfrey, Marshall’s numerous mixture of references, from artwork historical past to black tradition, is a part of his genius: “He’ll consult with Raphael and Holbein as a result of he’s a scholar of portray and its historical past, and he’ll consult with Lauryn Hill as a result of he is an individual on the planet and he listens to nice music.”

Nonetheless, probably the most placing characteristic of College of Magnificence, College of Tradition, very like most of Marshall’s works within the retrospective, is the figures themselves. Each particular person within the salon is painted in a deep shade of black, which Godfrey says additional forces viewers to consider “the presence of black individuals inside large-scale work. Within the ’60s and ’70s, particularly within the States, individuals had been starting to make use of the phrase black with a capital B to consult with themselves and their identification”, Godfrey explains. “At that time, Marshall determined to make figures that had been additionally black, actually.”Â