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Month: November, 2008

James Baldwin Photos: Black History Scrapbook

23 November, 2008 (05:10) | African American History | By: Haasim

James Baldwin Photos

James Baldwin Smoking James Baldwin In Paris

James Baldwin, Langston Hughes & Ralph Ellison

Young James Baldwin 2

About James Baldwin

Born August 2, 1924 in Harlem, NY,
Died December 1 1987, St. Paul-de-Vence, France

The first of nine children of Berdis (Jones) a clergyman and a factory worker, David (step-father), in Harlem, NY. Baldwin was a storefront preacher for three years starting at age 14. His writing started as a way to escape his stern stepfather. He attended Frederick Douglass Junior High School and DeWitt Clinton High School

He graduated from high school in 1942 and moved to New Jersey to begin working as a railroad hand. In 1944 he moved to Greenwich Village where he met Richard Wright and began his first novel, In My Father’s House. In 1953 he finished his important novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain which stands as a partially autobiographical account of his youth. The following year he wrote the play, The Amen Corner and won the Guggenheim Fellowship.

During the 1960’s Baldwin returned to the United States and became politically active in support of civil rights.

Baldwin wrote novels, poetry, essays and a screenplay in the later years of his life. He died of stomach cancer at his home in St. Paul de Vence, France.

James Baldwin Videos

YouTube Preview Image

James Baldwin on Malcolm X & Martin Luther King

Additional Resources

James Baldwin Biography

James Baldwin Posters & Art Prints

African American Christmas Ornaments

22 November, 2008 (08:07) | Christmas, New Releases, Site Updates | By: Haasim

Our beautiful African American Christmas Ornaments will arrive next week and are the perfect way decorate your Christmas tree in a more multicultural and racially diverse way.  Our ornaments are made of high quality materials and range from 4″ to 4.5″ in height.  Below you will find some samples of these Ethnic Christmas Ornaments for you to view.

Creating Pride: Improving Education Through The Arts

22 November, 2008 (07:43) | Organizations | By: Haasim

After living in Atlanta for several years I have learned about this organization and have been impressed with the way they use Art to educate and empower students and raise funds at the same time.  I’m not sure if they have offices outside of Atlanta but their contact information is below for those that are interested in helping a worthy cause.

About Creating Pride

Creating Pride is a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving education.   It accomplishes this task by equipping teachers to create engaging work so students succeed academically, socially and artistically.   Creating Pride works hard - in all that it does - to provide the best possible teacher development and resources encouraging the use of creativity and the arts in the daily curriculum by all teachers, across all disciplines.

Creating Pride Programs

ArtsNow

Patchwork Paintings

Contact Creating Pride

100 Edgewood Avenue
Suite 925
Atlanta, GA 30303
Phone: 404-688-2480
Fax: 404-688-2424
Email: info@creatingpride.org

Whitfield Lovell at the Hudson River Museum

17 November, 2008 (08:06) | Black Art News, Other | By: Haasim

Intimate Views of Anonymous African-Americans
By: Benjamin Genocchio, NY Times

Large-scale tableaus with drawings from the past decade by the well-regarded New York City-based African-American artist Whitfield Lovell are the subject of a powerful exhibition at the Hudson River Museum. It is the excruciating consciousness of the weight of history that makes these works so memorable, along with the fact that they are really beautiful.

Born in the Bronx in 1959, Mr. Lovell focuses on the lives of black Americans from about the end of the Civil War through World War II. History and memory ooze from his assemblages, which evoke for viewers ideas and feelings linked to the period’s societal and political changes. They are sort of sweet and scary, uplifting and depressing at the same time.

Dominating the artist’s assemblages are exquisitely detailed life-size charcoal portraits based on historic photographs of anonymous people whose biographical details are now lost to time. Mr. Lovell imagines a new life and a world from scratch, posing them in domestic interiors or homemade settings using furniture picked up in flea markets, tag sales and salvage yards.

Bringer by Whitfield Lovell

“Bringer” (1999), on loan from the Neuberger Museum of Art at Purchase, is an especially evocative work. It consists of a full-length charcoal portrait of a matronly black woman drawn on recycled wooden floor paneling, attached to which is an old glass oil lamp. On an antique side table in front of the drawing is another lamp. Together they evoke a sparse domestic interior.

Empathy is what gives this assemblage and others like it its power. The woman appears to be waiting for someone, her hand resting on the back of an empty chair in a gesture of affection. In anticipation she has left the lights on. In our own way, we have all lived it.

The visual device of a lone figure standing next to an unfilled seat recurs in several assemblages. “Ode” (1999) contains a beautiful charcoal portrait, on recycled floor boards, perhaps from an old barn, of a well-dressed man standing beside an empty easy chair, in front of which are two badly neglected and torn velvet chairs. The overall impression is one of time passing and loss.

In another tableau, “In Silence” (2003), an empty doll’s bed covered in blue gingham fabric is attached to the bottom of a portrait of a middle-aged woman wearing a high-necked blouse, her hair knotted on her head. The empty bed suggests a memorial of some kind, perhaps to a dead child. Either that or it hints at the profession of the woman, who is dressed like a 19th-century nurse.

Writing in the exhibition catalog, Bartholomew F. Bland, the museum’s curator and the organizer of this exhibition, suggests that by creating a surrogate existence for lost and contested African-American histories, the artist aims to restore a sense of dignity, identity and historical recognition to the subjects.

This quality is more apparent in some pieces than others. “Battleground” (2001) contains a delicately drawn full-length portrait of a black soldier serving in the Union Army during the Civil War. Beneath the portrait, again on recycled flooring, is an elevated platform on which sits a cannon ball, along with an Eastlake table with an open book resting on top of it.

This work memorializes the more than 150,000 African-American men who served in the Union Army and whose bravery is often overlooked in history books. Beyond this, the meaning is ambiguous, for in spite of the title the soldier stands alone, at attention - emphasizing, perhaps, the anonymity of his sacrifice.

“Twine” (2001) deals with more recent historical events, specifically the lynching of African-Americans in the South during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Here meaning is more overt, the artist using a rope to frame the portrait of an elegant and affluent-looking black man on wooden planking. Look closely and you’ll notice the man has no legs. He is literally floating in the air.

Of course, Mr. Lovell is not alone among African-American artists in mining the historical archive. Willie Cole, Carrie Mae Weems and Lyle Ashton Harris all rescue and reuse historical images of black Americans to counter stereotypes. What is peculiar to Mr. Lovell’s work is its disquieting intimacy.

Mr. Lovell’s assemblages look at the hidden, private world of African-Americans. They take viewers into homes, show people at work, at play, alone at war. They provide an unexpectedly intimate view of black people from a bygone era, a view that exposes the biases and limitations of standard histories and inspires new historical perceptions.

“Whitfield Lovell: All Things in Time,”
Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton
Avenue, Yonkers, through May 10. Information: (914) 963-4550 or www.hrm.org.

This Is Our Moment - Barack Obama Poster

12 November, 2008 (09:12) | African American History, African American Leaders, New Releases | By: Haasim

Barack Obama Poster - This Is Our Moment

This Is Our Moment - Barack Obama Motivational Poster

Title: This Is Our Moment
Artist: Anonymous
Size: 24×36 inches
Price: $8.00

Barack Obama Motivational Poster: Destiny

12 November, 2008 (09:05) | African American History, African American Leaders, New Releases | By: Haasim

Barack Obama Poster - Destiny

Destiny - Barack Obama Motivational Poster

Title: Destiny
Artist: Anonymous
Size: 24×36 inches
Price: $8.00

Barack Obama Commemorative Plates

12 November, 2008 (08:38) | African American History, African American Leaders, New Releases, Site Updates | By: Haasim

Barack Obama Commemorative Plates

These Barack Obama Commemorative Plates are the newest addition of Barack Obama memorabilia to our site.   These plates are beautifully crafted out of porcelain and have 22kt Gold Rims.  They weigh 11 ounces and are 8 inches in diameter.  They are the perfect way to remember and cherish this historic election and campaign where the first African American was elected president.  These plates will begin shipping on November 24, 2008 but are available for pre-orders.  We will only be receiving a limited number of plates so if you are interested please do not wait.  Order Your Barack Obama Commemorative Plates Today!

“Obama: Change II” by Gregory Wishum

5 November, 2008 (10:18) | New Releases | By: Haasim

Obama: Change II by Gregory Wishum

Title: Obama: Change II
Artist: Gregory Wishum
Size: 24×20 inches
Price: $28.00

“Yes We Can” by Henry Battle

5 November, 2008 (10:07) | Henry Lee Battle, New Releases | By: Haasim

Yes We Can by Henry Battle

Title: Yes We Can
Artist: Henry Battle
Size: 24×36 inches
Price: $36.00

“President Barack Obama” by Gregory Wishum

5 November, 2008 (10:02) | New Releases | By: Haasim

President Barack Obama by Gregory Wishum

Title: President Barack Obama
Artist: Gregory Wishum
Size: 24×36 inches
Price: $28.00