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Category: Black Art News

Rest In Peace Ernie Barnes

1 May, 2009 (09:21) | Black Art News, Ernie Barnes | By: Haasim

Ernie Barnes Dies at 70

Ernie Barnes and Kanye West

Ernie Barnes, the famous neo-mannerist artist, passed on April 27, 2009 at  Cedar-Sinai Hospital at the age of 70.  He died from complications from a rare blood disorder.

Ernie Barnes was best known as the official artist for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.  He also was the “ghost” painter for J.J. on the hit TV sitcom “Good Times”.  His painting “Sugar Shack” is probably his most famous and popular print due to it being showcased during the closing credits of “Good Times” and also because it was used on Marvin Gaye’s 1976 album “I Want You”.  Ernie Barnes

Ernie Barnes was one of the most succesful figurative artists of his time.  His paintings featured ordinary people and athletes with elongated forms and closed eyes.   They were typically painted in a manner that expressed their physical or spiritual struggles.  His style has also been described as that of a neo-mannerist.

He was born in Durham, NC on July 15, 1938 and was a professional football player prior to pursuing his true passion, Art.  He has been commissioned by entertainers such as Kanye West, Flip Wilson, Sylvester Stallone, Harry Belafonte and many, many more.

He was a tremendously talented artist and a true icon in the African American art industry.  He will be missed.

Additional Resources

Ernie Barnes Biography

Ernie Barnes Video Interview & Biography

Rest In Peace Ernie Barnes!

Alan and Aaron Hicks on TV in Chicago!

12 March, 2009 (05:25) | Alan and Aaron Hicks, Audio & Videos, Black Art News, Book of the Week | By: Haasim

Twin Hicks Art on TV

Alan and Aaron Hicks were recently featured on WTTW in Chicago.  In this video you can learn more about the two phenomenal twin artists, their history, and their techniques and strategies when creating art.  You can also learn more about their new childrens book: Noah’s Ark which was created with their long time collaborator Robert Richardson.

Check out the video for yourself and learn more about Alan Hicks and Aaron Hicks and Twin Hicks Art!

Purchase the Twin Hicks new book online today!

Twin Hicks and Robert Richardson Present Alan Hicks

We also have a lot of art by Alan and Aaron Hicks featured throughout our site.  View some of their art in our Black Bibilical Heroes Art Collection.

Justin Bua Live At ArtExpo NY!

8 February, 2009 (08:08) | Black Art News, Justin Bua | By: Haasim

Justin Bua

Justin Bua will be bringing his paintings and drawings to life as he performs his one man show at ArtExpo in New York City from February 28, 2009 until March 1, 2009.  The performances are scheduled to take place everyday at 2:00pm.

ArtExpo is the one of the country’s best trade shows for the fine art industry as a whole.   There are always tremendous opportunities to network and to meet and discover new artists and publishers.  This year the ArtExpo will be held at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center which is located at: 655 W. 34th Street – New York City, NY 10001.

Black Art Collection Aims To Educate

4 February, 2009 (08:42) | Black Art News | By: Haasim

Article: Black Art Collection Aims To Educate

Source: Tuscaloosa News
Author: Ashley Boyd
Link: View Article By Clicking Here

When I first pulled this article up online I was very surprised to learn that the University of Alabama was the institution that was displaying this tremendous collection of Black Art and using it as a teaching tool for students at the institution. Not being from Alabama or ever have been a student at the University of Alabama I had a lot of preconceived notions that made this article a shock to the system but also an inspiration at the same time.

Who would have thought that the University of Alabama would have an African American Art Professor by the name of Amalia Amaki, be hosting lectures featuring prominent African American Artists regularly and currently be one of the sites hosting Paul R. Jones’ Art Collection!  This just goes to show the respect and reach of Black Art and one can only hope that art created by African American and other Ethnic artists would continue to garner the kind of respect, prestige and recognition that it has deserved for decades yet has been so elusive and hard to achieve.

Below you will find some photos and bios of Paul R. Jones and Amalia Amaki.

Paul R. Jones Bio
(courtesy of Wikipedia)

Paul R. JonesOn June 1, 1928, Will and Ella Jones were blessed with a baby boy, Paul Raymond Jones. Jones grew up with his four sisters and caring parents in the town of Bessemer, Alabama. To the Jones family, education was the key to success, so it was decided that Paul R Jones would attend school somewhere in the North to pursue the best education possible at that time. After a trip to the World’s Fair in New York City, Ella Jones knew her son would attend school in New York.

By high school, Paul R Jones moved back home with his family. Jones used his athletic skills, self-discipline, and competitive nature to compete in track and football. Along with athleticism, Paul R Jones was an intelligent young man in high school. His intellect and athleticism landed him two separate scholarships for college.

Following high school, Paul R Jones enrolled in Alabama State University aspiring to earn a law degree. Unfortunately, because of the racial discrimination there, Jones was not encouraged to pursue a degree in law. Instead, he continued his education at Howard University, and afterwards he decided to return home again.

The first job Paul R Jones encountered at home was the position of Executive at the Interracial Committee of the Jefferson County Coordinating Council for Social Forces, allowing him to realize his political aspirations. After his first job, Jones worked in the U.S. Department of Justice’s Community Relations Service. Later, he served as a deputy director of the U.S. Peace Corps in Thailand.

During the early 1960’s, Paul R Jones decided to purchase his first three paintings that formed the beginning of his collection. They were by artists, Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas, and Chagall. After collecting for a couple of years, Jones realized that African-American art was “abundant and affordable” yet hardly ever represented in the collections of museums. As the years passed, his collection of African-American art and his reputation grew. Jones’ collection has been featured at several different museums over the course of his lifetime.

Amalia Amaki Bio
(Courtesy of Wikipedia)

Amalia AmakiDr. Amalia K. Amaki is currently a curator of the Paul R Jones Collection, a professor of Black American Studies at the University of Delaware, and an artist herself. She divides her time between Atlanta, Georgia and Newark, Delaware.

Born Linda Faye Peeks, Amalia Amaki changed her name due to her passion for writing and art at an early age. She majored in psychology and journalism at Georgia State Universityand received her B.A. in photography and art history at the University of Mexico. Dr. Amaki studied as an Emory University Foreign Study Fellowand achieved her M.A. degree in modern European and American art and a Ph.D. in Twentieth-century American art and culture from Emory University in the Institute of Liberal Arts. She is also a member of the College of Art Association,American Association of University Professors, Emory University Alumni Board of Governors,Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts,High Museum of Art, Georgia Museum of Art, and Spelman College Museum of Fine Arts.

Barack Obama: “Here I Come To Save The Day”

31 December, 2008 (07:18) | Affiliate Showcase, Black Art News | By: Haasim

Alex Ross is a famous comic book artist who hails from Portland, Oregon.  Educated at the American Academy of Art, he  is known for his attention to detail and for painting his comic book scenes instead of drawing them.  He has recently created a print of Obama as a Super Hero entitled “Time For A Change” and a print of George W. Bush, Jr. as a Super Villian entitled “Bush Sucking Democracy Dry”.  I really thought the prints and the vision of the artist was unique and funny all at the same time.  I have always enjoyed good comic books and comic book movies so naturally this was right up my alley.  I hope you all enjoy viewing these works as much as I did.  Also, please note that neither one of the prints are available at our site but if you interested in purchasing one you can get them from Rupps Comics!

Time For A Change by Alex Ross Bush Sucking Democracy Dry by Alex Ross

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.

Black Art & Politics: Gilbert Young & Barack Obama

2 November, 2008 (08:51) | Black Art News, Gilbert Young | By: Haasim

ATLANTA ARTIST ENDORSED BY BARACK OBAMA, HISTORIC PORTRAIT BY GILBERT YOUNG TO BENEFIT CAMPAIGN

A portrait of Senator Barack Obama, created by renowned artist Gilbert Young, was recently awarded an unprecedented honor when Senator Obama endorsed the dual portrait by autographing the original work along with the artist.

“Obama said I made him look good,” the Atlanta-based artist smiled. “I told him, that’s my job!”

Gilbert Young & Barack ObamaThe portrait, entitled “History + Hope = Change” will be used to create a series of commemorative posters, limited edition prints, and a very special limited edition full-sized serigraph. Proceeds from sales of the items will benefit the Obama for America campaign. Posters will sell for $20, signed and numbered prints will start at $1500 and will be packaged with an autographed photo of Young and Barack signing the original work of art.

Young created the portrait after receiving an invitation to attend a reception for the Senator during the NAACP Annual Convention recently held in Cincinnati.

He A'int Heavy by Gilbert Young

“I handed my card to Obama and he said he knew my work,” Young said. “Then Obama called me a legend. It was one of the highlights of my career. I’ve never been so proud of my own work.”

The card Obama received featured a work of art that has become Young’s trademark. It depicts a man reaching down over a wall for another man’s hand. Young considers the image, entitled “He Ain’t Heavy,” to be a personal statement on social responsibility. “He Ain’t Heavy” has sold in galleries and gift shops across the U.S. and in select cities around the world for nearly 30 years.

Young will be in Denver August 25-29 to sign his historic “History + Hope = Change” posters and prints during the 2008 Democratic National Convention as a featured artist at the 9th annual After 5 Jazz & Blues Festival held in the historic Five Points Community. He will also appear at a reception hosted by Akente Express Gallery.

For more information, please visit www.historyhopechange.com, which will go live on August 24, 2008.

CONTACT:
Lea Winfrey-Young
678-933-2691
youngartone@aol.com

New Black Heritage Stamp by Kadir Nelson

6 October, 2008 (09:31) | Black Art News, Kadir Nelson | By: Haasim

Kadir Nelson: Black Heritage Stamp – Anna Julia Cooper

Anna Julia Cooper by Kadir Nelson - Black Heritage Stamp

Postal Service unveils new stamp tonight in Birmingham
By: Birmingham News

The U.S. Postal Service will unveil in Birmingham tonight the 32nd stamp in its Black Heritage series.

USPSNew stamp in Black Heritage series The stamp, honoring Anna Julia Cooper, will be displayed for the first time at the 92nd anniversary reception for the Journal of African-American History.

Cooper, an educator, scholar, feminist and activist, fought for social justice and civil rights for black women, young people and the poor through her scholarship, community outreach and innovative educational leadership.

The stamp features a portrait of Cooper created by Kadir Nelson, who based his painting on an undated photograph.

Additional Resources

Anna Julia Cooper: George Washington University Biography

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

LEAVE A COMMENT


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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