Record Details



Enlarge cover image for African-American artists, 1880-1987 : selections from the Evans-Tibbs Collection / Guy C. McElroy, Richard J. Powell, Sharon F. Patton ; introduction by David C. Driskell. Book

African-American artists, 1880-1987 : selections from the Evans-Tibbs Collection / Guy C. McElroy, Richard J. Powell, Sharon F. Patton ; introduction by David C. Driskell.

Summary:

"Three essays in this companion volume to a traveling exhibition trace the artistic and political forces shaping African-American art of the last century. McElroy, guest curator at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C., explores the years 1880-1920; however, his dry, formalistic analyses of various works do not address what their makers might have had in common aside from race. Fortunately, Powell, program director for the Washington D.C. Project for the Arts, and Patton, chief curator of Harlem's Studio Museum, who respectively cover the periods 1920-1950 and 1950-1987, relate the pieces in the collection to one another, placing them in a socio-historical context. Color reproductions of 75 works are well integrated and commendably diverse, and include art by Elizabeth Catlett, whose subjects address societal inequities, and by Charles Alston, who in the 1930s led the influential Harlem Art Workshop and who was equally adept at figurative and abstract representation. Prints, etchings such as those of Henry O. Tanner, whose works are marked by religious themes, and the folk art of Bill Traylor, who at 85 began to draw on cardboard scraps, complement the oil paintings depicted here." -- Publishers Weekly.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0295968370
  • ISBN: 9780295968377
  • ISBN: 0295968362
  • ISBN: 9780295968360
  • Physical Description: 125 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
  • Publisher: Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, in association with University of Washington Press, Seattle, ©1989.

Content descriptions

General Note:
from MS513 Therasea Elder papers.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (page 125).
Formatted Contents Note:
The foundations for change, 1880-190 / Guy C. McElroy -- From renaissance to realization, 1920-1950 / Richard J. Powell -- The search for identity, 1950-1987 / Sharon F. Patton -- Exhibition checklist and artist biographies.
Additional Physical Form available Note:
Also issued online.
Subject:
Evans-Tibbs Collection > Exhibitions.
Evans-Tibbs Collection.
African American art > 19th century > Exhibitions.
African American art > 20th century > Exhibitions.
African American art.
Genre:
Exhibition catalogues.
Exhibition catalogs.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library N 6538 .B53 M44 1989 249986 Stacks Available -

Summary: "Three essays in this companion volume to a traveling exhibition trace the artistic and political forces shaping African-American art of the last century. McElroy, guest curator at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C., explores the years 1880-1920; however, his dry, formalistic analyses of various works do not address what their makers might have had in common aside from race. Fortunately, Powell, program director for the Washington D.C. Project for the Arts, and Patton, chief curator of Harlem's Studio Museum, who respectively cover the periods 1920-1950 and 1950-1987, relate the pieces in the collection to one another, placing them in a socio-historical context. Color reproductions of 75 works are well integrated and commendably diverse, and include art by Elizabeth Catlett, whose subjects address societal inequities, and by Charles Alston, who in the 1930s led the influential Harlem Art Workshop and who was equally adept at figurative and abstract representation. Prints, etchings such as those of Henry O. Tanner, whose works are marked by religious themes, and the folk art of Bill Traylor, who at 85 began to draw on cardboard scraps, complement the oil paintings depicted here." -- Publishers Weekly.