Exu do Blues em 4 atos, 2023 by Emerson Rocha

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Exu do Blues em 4 atos, 2023 by Emerson Rocha
Howardena Pindell Untitled 1972–73 American, born 1943 Acrylic and cut and punched papers on canvas Dimensions Overall: 87 1/2 × 91 1/8 × 1 3/4 in. (222.25 × 231.46 × 4.45 cm) Collection Modern and Contemporary Art Credit Line Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Endowment Object Number 2017.8 Vmfa
Noah Davis (1983-2015) — Black Wall Street [oil and acrylic on canvas, 2008]
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Tenor
1985
BHM repost of the day! Here’s my illustration of Henry Ossawa Tanner, the first Black painter to gain international acclaim for his depiction of landscapes and biblical themes.
Here’s the link to my complete blog post, with a brief history, links and sources: https://blog.alleannaharris.com/black-history-month-henry-ossawa-tanner/
In the blog post, I share links to two talks about the life and work of Tanner and a link to donate to the preservation of the Tanner House.
💬 0 🔁 10 ❤️ 16 · Today's Black History Month illustration is of Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859-1937), the first Black painter to gain internati
Muses.
by
Francois Cauvin
francois_cauvin
William H. Johnson, Blind Singer, ca. 1940. Screenprint with tempera additions.
Johnson was among the foremost painters of African-American life during the Harlem Renaissance. Born in South Carolina and educated in fine arts in New York and Provincetown, Johnson spent most of his time from the mid-1920s to the late 1930s in Europe, where he was influenced by Post-Impressionism and Expressionism. After achieving critical acclaim abroad, he returned to New York permanently in 1938 under the threat of war and with a desire to reconnect to his roots. The move produced a dramatic change in his work. Assigned by the government's Works Progress Administration to teach at the Harlem Community Art Center, Johnson became immersed in the sights, sounds, and people of New York's African-American community, which he captured in compositions of flat shapes, patterned designs, and brilliant colors that were distinctly modernist in their simplicity and directness.
During his lifetime, Johnson created more than seventy-five prints. While in Europe he produced woodcuts and linoleum cuts, usually with hand coloring, inspired by the raw power of German Expressionism. After returning to New York, he took up screenprint and pochoir, techniques that suited his new embrace of simplified forms and bold colors. He printed these works on assorted found papers and often completed his images by hand with tempera, making each print slightly different from the next. He frequently experimented with subjects by printing compositional variants and also rendering them in drawing and painting, each format enriching the other, but with the printed versions the most simplified of all.
Notable among Johnson's New York prints are those that capture the essence of Harlem's fashion, music, and dance. This print, entitled Blind Singer, shows a pair of musicians in an open-air performance that was common on the city's bustling streets. The composition's flatness, pure color, and orchestrated angularity endow this still image with a sense of rhythmic motion and dynamic energy. --Judy Hecker, in Deborah Wye, Artists and Prints: Masterworks from The Museum of Modern Art
Photo & text: MoMA