Joseph Delaney, Woman in Striped Dress, 1964, oil on board. Image via knoxart.org. |
The Larry and Brenda Thompson Collection of African American Art
March 22 – June 16, 2013
KNOXVILLE MUSEUM OF ART
1050 World’s Fair Park
Knoxville, TN
Larry and Brenda
Thompson have amassed a remarkable collection of art by African Americans from
around the nation. The strength of the Thompson’s collecting process lies in
their considered attention to artists who have typically not been recognized in
the traditional narratives of African American art.
In addition to
acknowledged “masters,” the Thompsons have collected works by artists who have
been labeled “emerging,” “unknown,” “outsider,” “eccentric,” “vernacular,”
“regional” and more. The result is a collection that redefines the landscape of
American art, offering a more in-depth, inclusive understanding of African
American artists and their aesthetic and social concerns. The Thompsons have
not only identified and supported artists inside and outside of the canon, but
they have also cultivated meaningful relationships with a variety of artists
and their families that have lasted decades.
Represented in this
diverse selection of artists are Beauford and Joseph Delaney, two of
Knoxville’s most important artists. Born to a minister-father, the Delaney
brothers learned to draw on Sunday school cards at church and were given art
lesson by distinguished local artist Lloyd Branson. The brothers left Knoxville
in the mid 1920s to pursue their art careers in larger arenas, but followed
very different artistic paths. After studying in Boston, Beauford (1901-1979)
chose New York and later Paris as the ideal settings for his experiments with
expressive abstraction. Joseph (19903-1986) headed for Chicago before settling
in New York, and remained devoted to urban realism. Tradition Redefined allows
East Tennessee viewers familiar with the brothers’ work an opportunity to
evaluate it within the broader context of African American art of the last
century.
Tradition Redefined:
The Larry and Brenda Thompson Collection of African American Art is organized by
the David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the Visual Arts and Culture of
African Americans and the African Diaspora at the University of Maryland, College
Park. This exhibition is supported, in part, by a special fund from the Office
of the President at the University of Maryland, College Park, and a grant from
the Maryland State Arts Council. The works are owned by Georgia Museum of Art,
University of Georgia; The Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Collection of
African American Art
(Blog dedicated to all things Beauford Delaney)
No comments:
Post a Comment