Results 1 to 4 of 4
- Faith Ringgold : American people / by Ringgold, Faith,artist.(CARDINAL)178143; Carrion-Murayari, Gary,editor.(CARDINAL)499374; Gioni, Massimiliano,editor.(CARDINAL)314447; Ringgold, Faith.Works.Selections.; New Museum (New York, N.Y.),host institution.(CARDINAL)135724;
Includes bibliographical references.Director's foreword / Lisa Phillips -- Hot from her soul; Faith Ringgold's art activism / Lucy R. Lippard -- Early works -- Murals on 57th Street / Mark Godfrey -- American people -- Faith / Amiri Baraka -- Black light -- The people's flag show / LeRonn P. Brooks -- Posters, for the women's house -- For a children's revolution / Julia Bryan-Wilson -- Feminist series, slave rape, windows of the wedding, dah, first story quilts -- Inside and outside the museum / Bridget R. Cooks -- Soft sculptures -- Summoning ancestors, inspiring descendants: Faith Ringgold and literature / Zoé Whitley -- The bitter nest -- In conversation: A retelling of Tar Beach / Jordan Casteel -- The fantastical alive / Tschabalala self -- The soft library of faith / Diedrick Brackens -- Tar Beach and New York quilts -- Dancing at the Louvre / Michele Wallace -- The French collection -- Opening doors: A conversation with Faith Ringgold / Massimiliano Gioni -- The American collection, coming to Jones Road part 2 -- Works in exhibition -- Artists biography -- Contributor biographies.Faith Ringgold is a critically acclaimed American artist whose unique methods of visual storytelling have documented and advanced art historical, feminist, and civil-rights movements for more than half a century. Accompanying a major retrospective at the New Museum, New York, this expansive survey covers work from all periods of her career, including her early civil rights-era figurative paintings, her graphic political protest posters, and her signature experimental story quilts. Exhibition: New Museum, New York, USA (17.02.-05.06.2022).
- Subjects: Ringgold, Faith; African American women artists; Civil rights movements in art.;
- Available copies: 0 / Total copies: 1
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- Beverly McIver : full circle / by McIver, Beverly,artist.(CARDINAL)275768; Boganey, Kim,editor,contributor.(CARDINAL)856050; Powell, Richard J.,1953-contributor.(CARDINAL)193885; Wallace, Michele,contributor.(CARDINAL)136576; Gibbes Museum of Art (Charleston, S.C.),host institution.(CARDINAL)197918; Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art,publisher,host institution.(CARDINAL)267778; Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art,host institution.(CARDINAL)158711; University of California Press,publisher.(CARDINAL)280932;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 127-130) and index.NCMA Collection,"This exhibition catalog accompanies a sweeping retrospective of contemporary artist and painter Beverly McIver. Curated by Kim Boganey, this exhibition presents a survey of works that represent the diversity of McIver's thematic approach to painting over her career. From early self-portraits in clown makeup to more recent works featuring her father, dolls, and figures in blackface, Full Circle illuminates the arc of Beverly McIver's artistic career while also touching on her personal journey. McIver's self-portraits explore expressions of individuality, stereotypes, and ways of masking identity; portraits of family provide glimpses into intimate moments, in good times as well as in illness and death. The show includes McIver's portraits of other artists and notable figures, recent work resulting from a year in Rome with American Academy's Rome Prize, and new work in which McIver explores the juxtaposition of color, patterns, and the human figure. Full Circle also features works that reflect on McIver's collaborations with other artists, as well as her impact on the next generation of artists. This complementary exhibition, In Good Company, includes artists who have mentored McIver, such as Faith Ringgold and Richard Mayhew, as well as those who have studied under her. This catalog includes a conversation with Beverly McIver by exhibition curator Kim Boganey, as well as two essays: one by leading Black feminist writer Michele Wallace, daughter of Beverly's graduate school mentor Faith Ringgold; and another by distinguished scholar of African American art history Richard Powell"--
- Subjects: Exhibition catalogs.; Interviews.; McIver, Beverly; McIver, Beverly; African American painting; African American women artists.; Black people in art;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Bisa Butler : portraits / by Warren, Erica,1982-editor,contributor.(CARDINAL)855570; Butler, Bisa,1973-artist,contributor.(CARDINAL)855567; Butler, Bisa,1973-Works.Selections.; Carter, Jordan,contributor.(CARDINAL)354006; Ko, Isabella,1997-contributor.(CARDINAL)855568; Wije, Michèle,contributor.(CARDINAL)855569; Art Institute of Chicago,organizer,publisher,host institution.(CARDINAL)137892; Katonah Museum of Art,organizer,host institution.(CARDINAL)202971; Yale University Press,distributor.(CARDINAL)332061;
Includes bibliographical references and index."Bisa Butler (b. 1975) is an American artist who creates arresting and psychologically nuanced portraits composed entirely of vibrantly colored and patterned fabrics that she cuts, layers, and stitches together. Often depicting scenes from African American life and history, Butler invites viewers to invest in the lives of the people she represents while simultaneously expanding art-historical narratives about American quiltmaking. Situating her interdisciplinary work within the broader history of textiles, photography, and contemporary art, contributions by a group of scholars--and entries by the artist herself--illuminate Butler's approach to color, use of African-print fabrics, and wide-ranging sources of inspiration. The first monograph on one of America's most innovative contemporary artists, this volume will serve as a primary resource that both introduces Butler's work and establishes a scholarly foundation for future research." --"Published in conjunction with an exhibition of the same title held at the Art Institute of Chicago, 2020-21. The exhibition was co-organized with the Katonah Museum of Art, where it was on view from March 15 to October 4, 2020"--Title page verso.
- Subjects: Exhibition catalogs.; Portraits.; Butler, Bisa, 1973-; African American quiltmakers; African Americans in art; African Americans; Art quilts; Exhibition catalogs.; Portraits on quilts;
- Available copies: 0 / Total copies: 1
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- African-American art : a visual and cultural history / by Farrington, Lisa E.,author.(CARDINAL)272314;
Includes bibliographical references and index.1. The art of perception: how art communicates : The primary source -- How to look at art: a case study : Iconography ; Formalism ; Biography ; Semiotics ; Psychoanalysis ; Contextual analyses -- Part I: Eighteenth and nineteenth century art : 2. Art and design in the colonial era : Africanisms in the New World : Architecture ; Sculptural art forms -- Fine arts in the age of slavery -- 3. Federal-period architecture and design : Architecture : Charles Paquet -- Woodwork : Early masters -- Federal-era craftsmen -- Civil War-era craftsmen : Thomas Day ; Henry Gudgell -- Ceramics : "Dave the potter" (David Drake) ; Thomas Commeraw -- Metalwork : Peter Bentzon -- Textile and clothing design : Early quilt making and makers ; Harriet Powers ; Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley -- 4. 19th-century Neoclassicism : Sculpture : Edmonia Lewis ; Florville Foy ; Daniel and Eugene Warburg -- Two-dimensional art : Joshua Johnson ; William Simpson ; Julien Hudson ; African-American women artists and friendship albums ; Jules Lion ; Patrick Henry Reason -- 5. Romanticism to Impressionism in the nineteenth century : The landscape tradition : Robert S. Duncanson ; Grafton Tyler Brown ; Edward Mitchell Bannister -- Portraiture and figurative art : David Bustill Bowser ; Nelson A. Primus ; Henry O. Tanner ; Annie E. Anderson Walker ; Photography ; James Presley Ball, Sr.. ; Augustus Washington ; Glenalvin, Wallace, and William Goodridge -- Architecture of the gilded age : Calvin Thomas Stowe Brent ; John Anderson and Arthur Edward Lankford ; George Washington Foster, Jr. ; Julian Francis Abele -- Black vernacular architecture -- Part II: Early to mid-20th century art : Modernism and the Harlem Renaissance : The making of Harlem : The great migration ; "Harlem: mecca of the new Negro" -- Supporting the renaissance: art patrons : Private and institutional patronage ; Black patronage -- Sculpture : Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller ; May Howard Jackson ; Sargent Claude Johnson ; Nancy Elizabeth Prophet ; Richmond Barthé -- Painting : William Edouard Scott ; Palmer Hayden ; Archibald Motley, Jr. ; Malvin Gray Johnson ; Aaron Douglas ; William H. Johnson ; Lois Mailou Jones -- Photography and printmaking : James Van Der Zee ; James Latimer Allen ; James Lesesne Wells ; King Daniel Ganaway ; Other African-American photographers -- 7. Social realism : The WPA Federal Art Project -- Social realist murals : Charles Alston and the Harlem Hospital murals ; Hale Woodruff and the Golden State murals -- Avant-garde architecture -- Augusta Savage, the Harlem Art Centers, and the Harlem Artists Guild : Selma Hortense Burke -- The Chicago Arts and Crafts Guild, Artists Union, and South Side Community Art Center : Margaret Burroughs ; Charles White -- Printmaking : Dox Thrash and the Philadelphia Fine Prints Workshop ; The printmaking legacy of Riva Helfond ; Printmakers at Karamu House in Cleveland -- 8. Mid-twentieth century transitions and surrealism : Figuration versus abstraction: a national debate -- The legacy of social realism : Elizabeth Catlett ; Ellis Wilson ; Romare Bearden ; Jacob Lawrence ; Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence ; John Biggers -- Surrealism : Hughie Lee-Smith ; Eldzier Cortor ; Rose Ransier Piper ; Minnie Evans -- Art Brut and self-taught artists : Bill (William) Traylor ; William Edmondson ; Clementine Hunter ; Horace Pippin, Jr. -- Photography : Gordon Parks ; Roy DeCarava ; Charles (Chuck) Stewart -- 9. Abstract expressionism : Action painting, gestural abstraction : Beauford Delaney ; Norman Lewis ; Alma Thomas -- Color field painting : Sam Gilliam ; Richard Mayhew -- Hard-edge painting : Al Loving ; William T. Williams -- Figurative expressionism : Robert (Bob) L. Thompson ; Betty Blayton -- Sculpture : Harold Cousins ; Richard Hunt ; Melvin (Mel) Eugene Edwards, Jr. ; Barbara Chase-Riboud --Part III: The latter 20th century : 10. Pop and Agitprop: the Black arts movement : Spiral and the civil rights movement : Reginald Gammon ; Raymond Saunders -- The Black arts movement : Museum protests ; Benny Andrews ; Cliff Joseph -- The WEUSI aesthetic : Ademola Olugebefola ; Ben F. Jones ; James Phillips -- OBAC and the Wall of Respect -- AfriCOBRA and the Black aesthetic : Jeffrey Donaldson ; Wadsworth and Jae Jarrell ; Barbara Jones-Hogu ; Nelson Stevens -- The OBAC and AfriCOBRA legacy: Black Power murals : William Walker ; Calvin B. Jones and Mitchell Caton -- Agiprop art : Dana C. Chandler, Jr. ; Joe Overstreet ; David Hammons -- 11. Black feminist art: a crisis of race and sex : A crisis of race and sex -- WSABAL and the WWA -- Black feminist artists : Kay Brown ; Faith Ringgold ; Dindga F. McCannon ; Betye Saar ; Emma Amos ; Nellie Mae Rowe -- Black feminist murals : Vanita Green and Justine Preshé DeVan ; Sharon Haggins Dunn -- 12. Postmodernism : Post-minimalism : Fred Eversley ; Lorenzo Pace ; Martin Puryear -- Conceptual art : Howardena Pindell ; Pat Ward Williams ; Glenn Ligon -- Intermedia art : Houston Conwill ; Terry Adkins ; Lorraine O'Grady ; Adrian Piper ; Renée Green ; Fred Wilson ; Martha Jackson-Jarvis -- Assemblage art : Noah Purifoy ; John Outterbridge ; Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson ; Alison Saar ; Willie Cole -- Postmodern photography : Carrie Mae Weems ; Dawoud Bey ; Lyle Ashton Harris ; Lorna Simpson -- Part IV: Contemporary trends : 13. Neo-expressionism, the new abstraction, and architecture : Neo-expressionism : Robert Colescott ; Joyce J. Scott ; Michael Ray Charles ; Kara Walker ; Kerry James Marshall ; Jean-Michel Basquiat ; Danny Simmons, Jr. -- The new abstraction : Jack Whitten ; Thornton Dial, Sr. ; Mildred Thompson ; Gaye Ellington -- Architecture : J. Max Bond, Jr. ; Norma Merrick Sklarek ; Mario Gooden and Ray Huff ; Phil Freelon ; The McKissack legacy ; Other notable architects -- 14. Post-Black art and the new millennium : Portraiture and identity politics : Deborah Willis ; Jeff Sonhouse ; Mickalene Thomas ; Kehinde Wiley -- Afrofuturism : Renée Cox ; Ellen Gallagher ; Laylah Ali ; Sanford Biggers ; Xaviera Simmons ; Trenton Doyle Hancock -- New millennium performance art : Nick Cave ; Camille Norment ; Intervention art : William Pope.L ; Theaster Gates -- New media abstraction : Chakaia Booker ; Xenobia Bailey ; Mark Bradford ; Jennie C. Jones ; Shinique Smith.African-American Art: A Visual and Cultural History offers a current and comprehensive history that contextualizes black artists within the framework of American art as a whole. The first chronological survey covering all art forms from colonial times to the present to publish in over a decade, it explores issues of racial identity and representation in artistic expression, while also emphasizing aesthetics and visual analysis to help students develop an understanding and appreciation of African-American art that is informed but not entirely defined by racial identity. Through a carefully selected collection of creative works and accompanying analyses, the text also addresses crucial gaps in the scholarly literature, incorporating women artists from the beginning and including coverage of photography, crafts, and architecture in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as well as twenty-first century developments. All in all, African American Art: A Visual and Cultural History offers a fresh and compelling look at the great variety of artistic expression found in the African-American community.
- Subjects: Textbooks.; African American art; African American artists;
- Available copies: 0 / Total copies: 1
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Results 1 to 4 of 4