Dox Thrash, Linda, ca 1940-41 - Purchase Art Print
Born in 1893 in Griffin, Georgia, Dox Thrash left his home at the age of fifteen in search of work up North. Settling into Chicago, Thrash worked as an elevator operator to fund his studies at the Art Institute of Chicago until his studies were cut short by the first World War, in which he served for a year as a member of the famous all-black 92nd Division “Buffalo Soldiers.""
Eventually, Thrash moved to Philadelphia to join the WPA, government-sponsored Philadelphia Fine Print Workshop. It was there that he and two others invented the carborundum mezzotint, then regarded as the first new printmaking method in more than 100 years. This process allowed him to create stunning and deeply contrasted portraits of Black sitters, gaining him praise from prominent African-American intellectuals of the time, such as Alain Locke and W. E. B. Dubois.
Fun fact: For years, Dox Thrash shared a studio with fellow Works Progress Artist and member of the Tra and Pyramid Clubs, Samuel Joseph Brown, whose work can also be found on Black in the Public Domain.
Dox Thrash, Linda, ca. 1940–41. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Public Domain (Open Access). https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/366024
















