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Month: September, 2008

Barack Obama Art: Spiritually Aligned by Edwin Lester

29 September, 2008 (12:30) | Edwin Lester, New Releases | By: Haasim

Edwin Lester Art Prints & Posters

Spiritually Aligned by Edwin Lester

Title: Spiritually Aligned
Artist: Edwin Lester
Size: 16 x 20 inches
Medium: Open Edition Offset Lithograph
Price: $20.00

The newest release by Edwin Lester is another Barack Obama inspired art print.  Fans of Edwin Lester and supporters of Barack Obama should both enjoy this art print.  It is currently available in our Edwin Lester Art Gallery and our Barack Obama Poster Collection.

Also please keep in mind that 10% of all sales from our Barack Obama Poster Collection will be donated directly to Barack Obama’s campaign.

William Cathay’s Secret by Kathy Morrow

29 September, 2008 (12:13) | African American History, New Releases, Other | By: Haasim

Cathay Williams Art Prints & Posters

William Cathay's Secret by Kathy Morrow

Title: Wiliam Cathay’s Secret
Artist: Kathy Morrow
Size: 16 x 28 inches
Medium: Signed and Numbered Limited Edition Lithograph
Edition Size: 350
Price: $95.00

This new release by Kathy Morrow features the famous Cathay Williams, Female Buffalo Soldier.  It has a tentative release date of October 15, 2008.  This image can be veiewed and purchased in our Buffalo Solider Art Gallery.  Below, you will also find some additional resources where you can learn about Cathay Williams, Female Buffalo Soldier.

Additional Resources

Cathay Williams, Female Buffalo Soldier With Documents

Cathay Williams, Woman Buffalo Soldier

The Cathay Williams Regiment

The African-American Experience in Art and Artifact

21 September, 2008 (14:51) | Black Art News | By: Haasim

The African-American Experience in Art and Artifact
Author: Gary Schwan, Palm Beach Post

Nearly 20 years ago, a man was clearing out his late aunt’s homestead in Alabama and discovered a letter that startled him.

It was dated 1832 and told of the sale of an 18-year-old slave for $550. The man knew what to do with it. He called his friend Bernard Kinsey.

“My white friend Wally was a little embarrassed to tell me about it, but I wanted to see it,” recalled Kinsey. “It arrived on my desk the next morning. When I held this document in my hand, chills just went through me. It was like entering into another person’s fate.”

Kinsey, a Los Angeles business consultant and West Palm Beach native, and his wife, Shirley, already collected all sorts of objects. But this letter “changed our view about what we should do as collectors.”

The Kinseys began to seriously collect African-American art and artifacts.Bernard Kinsley & Shirley Kinsely Art Showcase

The result can be seen at the Norton Museum of Art, where the exhibition “In the Hands of African American Collectors: The Personal Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey” is on view through July 20.

For Bernard Kinsey, the collection is a way to tell a story that will “inspire people about their possibilities,” he said.

“It’s the story of a single African-American family and our interests, but it’s also the story of African-American triumph and success from 1632 to today,” he added. “Through the centuries, people were doing wonderful things under tough circumstances. So this is not a ‘woe is me’ exhibition. It’s about achievement.”

The collection is wide-ranging. With more than 90 works, the show includes art, artifacts, vintage photos, books and letters. There is a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation, as well as works by such noted artists as Jacob Lawrence, Sam Gilliam and Romare Bearden.

An early object is a book of poetry from 1773 by New Englander Phyllis Wheatley. It was the first published book of poetry by an African-American.

There are numerous letters and documents relating to the humiliations of slavery. But there’s also a copy of an order issued by a Union Army general praising the performance of an African-American unit during a battle in Tennessee.

There are slave shackles but also an American flag used on parade by the “Buffalo Soldiers,” the 9th U.S. Cavalry and first black peacetime regiment, which patrolled the Plains during the Western expansion.

Bernard & Shirley Kinsely Art CollectionThe art ranges from paintings by 19th-century African-Americans who worked in Europe, such as Henry Ossawa Tanner, to artists who formed the Harlem Renaissance of the early 20th century, to contemporary abstractionists.

The Kinsey Collection is “very personal and eclectic, and they treat it as though they’re caretakers for the community,” said Charmaine Jefferson, director of the California African American Museum, in Los Angeles, organizers of the exhibition.

The “eclectic” part is an important distinction.

“There may be larger or more definitive collections, but this one touches on so many aspects of the African-American story,” she said. “It lets people know that our history didn’t start yesterday, nor with the civil rights movement, nor did it end there.”

Citing the art as an example, she added that “through history, we might have been painting cows, or Parisian cityscapes, or black field workers, or our sons and daughters.”

The Norton’s curator of American art, Marisa Pascucci, agrees. “There are works with strong African-American themes but also pictures that you couldn’t tell if the artists were African-American or not.” She cited Tanner, who worked in Paris, and Robert Scott Duncanson, a prominent 19th-century landscape painter inspired by the Hudson River School.

None of the objects is directly related to Florida, but both Kinseys have deep roots in the state. Shirley is from St. Augustine, and Bernard was raised in West Palm Beach, the son of the late U.B. Kinsey, a noted public school principal whose name is now attached to his old school in the city - U.B. Kinsey/Palmview Elementary School of the Arts.

A graduate of Roosevelt High School - “I was class president!” - Bernard retains family ties to the area, and remembers being known in his youth as “little Kinsey, the son of U.B. There was no getting around it.

“I grew up in a family that was always reading about the Italian Renaissance or some other subject,” he added. “Our appreciation for art and music was pretty intense, which eventually led to this interest in collecting. And, then my father was steeped in the civil-rights movement. My only regret about this exhibition is that he’s not here to see it.”

Bernard and Shirley Kinsey met as students at Florida A&M University. But their acquisitions began out West. As young newlyweds, they fell in love with our national parks, and somewhere between the Grand Canyon and the Grand Tetons, they caught the collecting bug.

They began by acquiring rocks, sand, petrified wood and numerous photographs to remind them of their travels together. Today, their collection includes art of all types, from Lalique glass to Oriental painting and Inuit sculpture. They reckon they own some 500 objects.

The Kinseys are collaborators, although Bernard tends to be the history buff, while his wife responds more to the art. “Shirley likes to forge relationships with the artists, and we have some very good friends among them,” he said.Bernard & Shirley Kinsley Art Collection

But Shirley has favorite artifacts in the collection - personal ones. They’re letters written by Florida novelist Zora Neale Hurston to Shirley’s uncle, James A. Webster. The pair met while students at Columbia University. “Growing up, I didn’t realize how well-regarded she was, so it meant a lot when I learned my uncle actually knew her back in the 1930s.”

As collectors, the Kinseys are often inspired to go a step farther when  they find an object that intrigues them.

An example is an 1854 letter to a slave dealer from a woman who  fretted that she had to sell her maid, a 17-year-old named Frances, in order to pay for horses.

“I never got it out of my mind,” said Bernard, who bought the letter at auction “for considerable expense. It says a lot about slavery and the duplicity of it.

“The person selling was the wife of the plantation owner, which was terribly unusual. We concluded that the wife was trying to get rid of the competition, if you know what I’m getting at.”

After much research, the Kinseys were able to identify Frances in an 1870 census in Georgia, then lost track of her. “We would love to find her descendants, so we could reunite them,” he said.

In 1991, Bernard Kinsey retired from Xerox Corp as a vice president, and Peter Ueberroth tapped him to co-chair RLA (Rebuild Los Angeles), aimed at attracting investments to the city after the 1992 riots.

As a business consultant, he has provided economic advice to governments all over the world.

In 2006, he was hired by Riviera Beach to negotiate with developers for the city’s proposed billion-dollar waterfront project. He negotiated a contract, but the project stalled over legal issues of eminent domain, and his contract wasn’t renewed last year by the city council. A smaller development is slated to begin soon.

He’s unfazed. “I had a one-year deal, and I negotiated the contract in six months. I did my job. In fact, the contract was the only thing that happened in Riviera Beach in 20 years, and I did it in a six-month period.”

Resources

PERSONAL TREASURES OF BERNARD & SHIRLEY KINSLEY

THE BERNARD & SHIRLEY KINSLEY RECEPTION

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Our African American Angels Art Collection Has Been Expanded!

21 September, 2008 (12:57) | Site Updates | By: Haasim

Our collection of art prints and posters that feature African American Angels has been expanded and now consists of five pages of phenomenal artwork by famous and emerging African American and other Ethnic artists. We have also removed some prints that are no longer available and out of print and replaced them with new African American Angel releases. View the images below for a selection of some of the art prints and posters now available in our expanded African American Angels Art Collection!

Earth Angel - Alix Beaujour - African American Angel Art Angel Dreams - Essud Fungcap - African American Angel Art Angelic Reflection - Fred Mathews - African American Angel Art

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Top 7 Art Prints & Posters for Black Beauty Salons

17 September, 2008 (08:41) | Bestsellers, Kevin "WAK" Williams, Other, Product Showcase | By: Haasim

Black Beauty Salon Art - Work Enviornment 1

I have always received a lot of inquiries from various people asking me what I would recommend for different types of businesses and offices.  These valued customers often ask me to recommend art for their beauty salons, barbershops, law offices, doctor offices, dentist offices, etc.  Therefore I am going to make a series of posts over the next 30 days that feature what I consider to be the top 7 art prints and posters for each environment.

My first posting in this series is what I consider to be the bestsellers and top art prints for beauty salons that have a primarily African American clientel.  These prints are what I affectionately call my “Black Beauty Salon Art”.

Please review and if you are interested in any of these prints or if you have any questions please visit our main site online at: www.blackartdepot.com or call our office at: 678-916-6545 to purchase or place an order over the phone.

Burn You Baby? by Annie Lee: $40.00

Burn You Baby? by Annie Lee: $40.00

Full Set or Fill-In? by Annie Lee: $40.00

Full Set or Fill-In? by Annie Lee: $40.00

Tenderheaded by Leonard Freeman: $28.00

Tenderheaded by Leonard Freeman: $28.00

Keepin Up Mess by Tracy Andrews: $32.00

Keepin' Up Mess by Tracy Andrews: $32.00

Style by WAK: $36.00

Style by WAK: $36.00

Rinse Cycle by WAK:

Rinse Cycle by WAK: $36.00

Style Portfolio by WAK: $75.00 (4 Indiviual Prints)

Style Portfolio by WAK: $75.00 (Set of 4 Indiviual Prints)

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Cidne Wallace Mugs Available on Oct. 1, 2008

12 September, 2008 (08:39) | Cidne Wallace, New Releases | By: Haasim

Cidne Wallace Mugs

The Black Art Depot is proud to now be in a position to offer mugs featuring the art of Cidne Wallace.  Each mug contains and image from her “Always A Sistah” Collection and are made of high gloss ceramic.  They are 16 oz. in size and make great gifts for yourself or your favorite tea or coffee drinker.  They will be in stock and ready to ship by the end of September or the first week of October.  Enjoy our new Cidne Wallace Mugs!

African-American Artists Flourish at City Park Festival

11 September, 2008 (08:47) | Black Art News | By: Haasim

African-American artists flourish at City Park festival
By Annette Espinoza, The Denver Post

Vincent Bursey listened intently Saturday as artist Barrett Ohene explained the meaning of the Adinkra tribe symbol “Gyenamy” that Ohene used in one of his silk thread art pieces at the Denver Black Arts Festival.

After hearing that the West African symbol meant “I fear no one but God,” the Bursey family bought a large, intricate, brown, white and beige silk piece that depicts African women with hands outstretched holding various symbols.

“It’s colorful and has a lot of meaning behind it,” Bursey said.

Paintings, collages, photography, sculpture, fiber and glass can be found at this year’s three-day festival in Denver’s City Park. It ends today, running from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m.

Denver Black Arts Festival

On Saturday, crowds of festival -goers lined up around Ferril Lake not to look at the algae on the water but to watch the festival’s popular Boogaloo Celebration Parade that featured the Colorado Cowboys of Color, a horse team, a color guard team, dance troupes, drum and drill teams and supporters of various Democratic candidates.

Sharon Johnson of Denver watched the parade with her grandson Armagh, 4, in tow.

“It gives our local black artists a chance to inspire our community, and we need to keep his generation aware of our culture,” Johnson said.

On Saturday, the Beat Street, a hip-hop stage featured dance demonstrations, a hip-hop Denver Black Arts Festivalartist showcase and competitions between DJs and emcees while the Children’s Pavilion featured hands-on art projects and mural painting.

Other stages hosted jazz musicians, gospel singers and dancers.

A variety of booths featured roasted corn, barbeque chicken and pork, hot dogs, burgers and brats, arts and crafts, clothing and accessories.

Today at 5:30 p.m., the festival will pay tribute to Denver’s two oldest African-American churches, Zion Baptist Church and Shorter AME.

At 5 p.m., Denver choreographer Cleo Parker Robinson will be presented with the 2008 Louise Duncan Lifetime Achievement Award for excellence in the arts on the Joda Village Stage.

The last time Denver artist Naomi Foster showed her art during the festival was 10 years ago. Now, her graphite and bright prisma color portraits of children stopped some art lovers in their tracks.

“It’s fantastic,” said Julie Ehlers of Denver. “I love the way she’s captured kids’ expressions.”

Annette Espinoza: 303-954-1655 or aespinoza@denverpost.com


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“Black Butterfly” by Michael Wallace: Featured Art Print

10 September, 2008 (08:24) | Featured Art Print, Other | By: Haasim

Title: Black Butterfly
Artist: Michael Wallace
Size: 20×30 inches
Price: $20.00

“Black Butterfly” by Michael Wallace is our featured print for this week.  It is one of  Michael Wallace’s new releases and an item we should have back in stock shortly.  If your interested in purchasing this print please visit our Michael Wallace Art Gallery online or call us at: 678-916-6545.  Enjoy!

‘Black Art’ Draws New Collectors, Better Prices

10 September, 2008 (05:45) | Black Art News | By: Haasim

‘Black Art’ Draws New Collectors, Better Prices
By: Lance Steagall

NEW YORK, Feb 26 (IPS) - Landscapes are the images that come to mind in the work of artist Richard Mayhew. The New York-born expressionist credits that to his part African American, part Native American roots.

“It’s a dual commitment to nature,” he says. “The land is very important to both cultures in terms of stimulation and spiritual sensitivity, and it’s very important to me.”

Richard Mayhew

Mayhew’s work was on display at the recent National Black Fine Arts Show, an annual event. G.R. N’Namdi, the oldest black-owned abstract art gallery in the U.S., represents Mayhew’s work. In 2003, his piece “Sanctuary” sold for 6,000 dollars. It’s now listed at 25,000 dollars.

Collectors and dealers who gathered at the mid-February show in New York are making note of the new and higher prices; though many works of black art are still available at a low price, the value days aren’t here to stay.

Indeed, the market for African American art is changing fast. Pieces are selling for higher prices, garnering more attention, and becoming an investment of choice for many. As the market booms, those who choose to invest are reaping the rewards, often selling works for many times their purchase price.

“It’s a function of African American art being ignored for a long time,” said Melissa Azzi of the Chicago-based Lusenhop Gallery. “Relatively speaking, African American art has been extremely undervalued.”

She likes to attribute the lack of appreciation to the attitudes of traditional art collectors. “More confrontational works tended to be ignored,” Azzi said. “But now institutions and collectors are a bit more comfortable looking back and taking note.”

In particular, movements of the 1960s and 70s that wove political and social commentary into their artistic vision, such as the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists (AFRI-COBRA), are getting a second look.

Azzi pointed to Wadsworth Jarrell’s 1972 portrait of socialist organiser Angela Davis, “Revolutionary”, as an example. In that piece, Jarrell depicts Davis in a moment of impassioned speech, using a collage of social slogans to form the scene. “STRUGGLE,” “RESIST,” “HAVE TO,” “GIVEN MY HEART,” and other textual messages radiate from the focal point — Davis’ head. The bright Kool-aid colors employed help place “Revolutionary” in its cultural frame. The piece has doubled in value over the past year, but, at 2,000 dollars, it’s still modestly priced.

The changing attitudes are not the only explanation for the changing market. Bill Hodges, owner of Manhattan’s Bill Hodges Gallery, attributes it to “African Americans being able to afford an investment in art.”

Hodges has collected African American art for more than 30 years. For most of that time, 90 percent of his customers were of non-African descent. Today, he says, the numbers have reversed — over 95 percent of his customers are fellow African Americans.

And new interest is not confined to African American art alone. The Ghanaian artist Tafa, now a resident of Harlem, New York, has seen attitudes evolve first-hand. “More and more people are appreciating black art, definitely,” he said. “It used to be under-represented, but now it gets attention both here [the U.S.] and there [Europe].”

In late January, the London-based Bonhams became the first non-South African auction house to have a sale dedicated exclusively to South African art. The sale brought in 1,422,528 pounds, with Irma Stern’s works “The Tomato Picker” and “Portrait of a West African Girl” fetching the top prices — 186,000 and 138,000 pounds, respectively.

Both sale prices were more than 50,000 pounds above their pre-auction estimated prices. In 2006, Bonhams sold a self-portrait by South African artist Gerard Sekoto for more than nine times its estimate. That portrait of Sekoto, a pioneer of urban black art and social realism, fetched 123,000 pounds.

In the U.S., the Los Angeles County Museum of Modern Art opened a new exhibit devoted exclusively to African art. The exhibit, titled “Tradition as Innovation”, opened in January of this year. Whereas the typical exhibit emphasises the influence African art had over modern artists who broke with tradition, such as Picasso, “Tradition as Innovation” presents African art in its own context.

At the Black Fine Arts Show in New York, Mark Small, owner of the Colorado-based Golden Galleries, was quick to point out the involvement of the youth in the scene. “All the time I see members of the younger generation recognising African American artists that, throughout most of their career, have remained largely unknown. That’s really great to see,” he said.

Many of those older artists trained in the city of Chicago. There, two pioneering schools gave African American artists an opportunity to study when few others would: the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the South Side Community Art Centre. The city subsequently became a hub, and many significant artists, including Wadsworth Jarrell, spent at least one year studying there. The works they produced marked a turning point in the history of black art.

Today, the growing interest in black art may mark another.


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Obama Art: A New Day by Justin Bua

10 September, 2008 (05:12) | Justin Bua, New Releases | By: Haasim

New Day by Justin Bua

Title: New Day
Artist: Justin Bua
Size: 24.5 x 20 inches
Media: Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas
Edition Size: 200
Price: $500.00


I know it seems like everyday more and more art prints, t-shirts and related products featuring the image of Barack Obama is released.  Yesterday, I was notified of this tremendous new piece by the famous Justin Bua.  It is entitled “A New Day” and is a limited edition giclee with only 200 prints being available to the public.  A percentage of each and every sale is donated to Obama’s campaign by Justin Bua and 10% of every Obama Poster or Obama Art Print is donated to Obama’s campaign by The Black Art Depot as well.  Get your copy today before they run out!