If you did not receive the 4th quarterly E-Update of the Guide to Black Art Exhibitions in 2010 and are interested in a copy, simply leave a comment or send a request to blackartproject@gmail.com.
EXHIBITIONS
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Chicago, Illinois
Romare Bearden, The Family, 1975, Photoetching and aquatint, Courtesy of the Thompson-Wilson Collection |
Collecting Is a Legacy: The Thompson-Wilson Collection is currently on view through September 24, 2010 at the Bessie Smith Cultural Center. Dorothy Wilson’s long passion for learning and educating was the inspiration for curating Collecting is a Legacy. "Ms. Wilson, a retired Howard University professor, began collecting African American art in the 1980s. Realizing that there were a small percentage of individuals across the U.S that collected African American artwork, she decided to develop an educational outreach focusing on collecting art."
Collecting is a Legacy, which was co-curated by Dorothy Wilson’s son, Lamar Wilson, showcases the family’s collection of 48 works that include paintings, sculptures, and drawings from African American artists. Included are works by Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Elizabeth Catlett, Joseph Holston, Paul Goodnight, John Riddle, Louis Delsarte, and etc. For additional information about this exhibit, call 423/ 266-8658.
Address: 200 East Martin Luther King Boulevard, Chattanooga 37403
Chicago, Illinois
Angelbert Metoyer, Story of a Goat, Mixed media |
Read more about the series and Metoyer at the G.R. N'Namdi Gallery Web site: http://www.grnnamdi.com/default.asp. Address: 110 North Peoria, Chicago 60607; 312/ 563-9240.
Newark, Delaware
Margo Humphrey, The History of Her Life Written Across Her Face, 1991.Lithograph 30"x29.5" Margo Humphrey 2009 |
The University of Delaware's University Museums present Her Story: Margo Humphrey Lithographs and Works on Paper in Mechanical Hall Gallery from September 8 - December 5, 2010. Her Story "highlights five decades of work by artist and printmaker Margo Humphrey. Bold and saturated color, animated figures, and syncopated rhythmic arrangements are hallmarks of Humphrey's oeuvre. Joyful, expressive and at times humorous, Humphrey's works offer artful commentary on American culture, including food ways, folkways, spirituality, love and loss. Though Humphrey labels her distinctive style ‘sophisticated naive,’ the narrative complexity and technical skill of her works attest to her artistic acuity."
One of the exhibit's accompanying programs is a conversation between artist Margo Humphrey and Troy Richards, University of Delaware, Department of Art. This program is scheduled for Thursday, September 16, 2010, at 5:00 pm in Mechanical Hall Gallery. Please RSVP at universitymuseums@udel.edu or 302/ 831-8037.
For other activities or details relating to Her Story, visit: http://www.udel.edu/museums/. Contact: universitymuseums@udel.edu; 302/ 831-8088.
For other activities or details relating to Her Story, visit: http://www.udel.edu/museums/. Contact: universitymuseums@udel.edu; 302/ 831-8088.
Purchase, New York
Faith Ringgold, American People Series #18: The Flag Is Bleeding, 1967, Oil on canvas, 72" x 96", Collection of the artist, © Faith Ringgold, Courtesy ACA Galleries, New York |
The Neuberger Museum of Art (Purchase College State University of New York) has organized the first comprehensive survey of the important paintings created by Faith Ringgold during the 1960s. The exhibition, American People, Black Light: Faith Ringgold's Paintings of the 1960s will be on view from September 11, 2010 through December 19, 2010. In addition to the landmark series, American People (1963-1967) and Black Light (1967-1971), are related murals and political posters. "These once influential paintings...with only a few notable exceptions, disappeared from view, and were omitted from critical, art historical discourse for more than forty years. Taken together, these works represent an unprecedented artistic exploration of the intersections of race, gender and class, made in direct response to the social upheavals of the 1960s."
American People, Black Light: Faith Ringgold's Paintings of the 1960s is curated by former Neuberger Museum Director Thom Collins and Neuberger Museum Curator and Purchase College Assistant Professor Tracy Fitzpatrick, with students from the Spring 2010 Purchase College Art History Department’s Exhibition Seminar. A catalogue accompanies the exhibition.
For accompanying programs, call 914/ 251-6100 or view the events calendar by month: http://www.neuberger.org/events.php. Address: 735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase 10577.
Sumter, South Carolina
Sumter County Gallery of Art presents two solo exhibitions: Tyrone Geter: Purgatory Ain't Nothin' But The Blues and Leo Twiggs: Explorations and Improvisations from September 2 through October 29, 2010.
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 2, 2010, 5:30 - 7:30 pm
Tyrone Geter: Purgatory Ain't Nothin' But The Blues is a series of numerous large-scale assemblages, drawings, paintings and mixed media pieces that are rarely displayed as a whole due to space constraints. Geter observes that the body of work in the exhibition about Purgatory: "encompasses the need and desire of the human spirit to strive for perfection amidst a fast paced world of entanglement, discourse, globalization and contradictions of today’s society."
Geter further elaborates, "the use of paints, charcoal, wood, twigs, clay, metal, plastic, cloth and torn paper enabled me to also combine two dimensional with three dimensional, realism with abstractions to harmoniously engage the viewer in a visual dialogue. Hopefully, anyone who has had a personal dialogue with the blues, felt its overbearing weight and the cold, harsh embrace of its touch will be able to follow the parallel path to Purgatory. It is my hope that after the Purgatory walk in the gallery, the viewers will leave with the belief that there is always light at the end of the tunnel, and that inner peace begins with self, even in the midst of chaos."
Leo Twiggs, Targeted Man #2 |
Leo Twiggs: Explorations and Improvisations consist of new works from two of the artist's most recent series, as well as a large-scale 3-D installation. The new series, Targeted Man, comprises much of the Sumter exhibit, exploring the times in which we live. "Terrorism has changed how we view each other and blurred the line between the hunter and the hunted."
“Twiggs creates art using the ancient process of Batik. His paintings are the result of several years of experimentation and development of a unique and innovative technique using a traditional medium. Though the process is old, Twiggs’ subject matter is contemporary and challenging, ranging from historical-political themes, including his infamous Confederate flags, to the spiritual. ”
For further information call 803/ 775-0543 or visit: www.sumtergallery.org.
Address: 200 Hassel Street, Sumter 29150 (adjacent to Patriot Hall).
Washington, DC
Lois Mailou Jones, Street Vendors, Port au Prince, Haiti, Acrylic, 1978 |
For further information, call 202/ 783-500 or visit this link: www.nmwa.org/exhibition/. Address: 1250 New York Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20005.
West Palm Beach
Nick Cave: Meet Me at the Center of the Earth will be on exhibit at the Norton Museum of Art from October 9, 2010 through January 9, 2011. Cave’s sculptures are called Soundsuits derived from the audible sound made by these colorful suits when they are worn. Meet Me at the Center of the Earth will feature over thirty examples of these mixed media sculptures along with videos and photographs of the sculptures in action.
Nick Cave, Soundsuit, 2009, Human hair, metal armature 99” h x 31” w x 27” d. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery |
Nick Cave’s Soundsuits are "multi-layered, mixed media, wearable sculptures designed to captivate visitors of all ages and bring together visual and performing arts for a unique museum experience. As reminiscent of African, Mardi Gras and religious ceremonial costumes as they are of haute couture, the Soundsuits explore ceremony, ritual, myth and identity through a subtle layering of references expressed through highly skilled techniques, varied traditions and an array of ordinary, scavenged yet seductive materials." Nick Cave finds the ordinary and discarded materials from our surroundings and re-contextualizes them into extraordinary and meaningful works of art. Nick Cave: Meet Me at the Center of the Earth is accompanied by a catalogue of the same name, published by Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco. For additional information, please call 561/ 832-5196 or visit http://www.norton.org/. Address: 1451 South Olive Avenue, West Palm Beach 33401.
Also, see and hear Nick Cave at the Black Art Project blog post: http://blackartproject.blogspot.com/2010/04/nick-cave-lecture-at-fowler-museum.html
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