African American Black

John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright

John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright
John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright
John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright

John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright

John Woodrow Wilson original Etching and aquatint from 2001 Death of Lulu, from the Richard Wright Suite signed numbers and dated Wilson 01 and 57/60. Dimensions: Sheet: 30.2 x 40.6 cm 11 7/8 x 16 in. John Woodrow Wilson was an African-American social realist artist. John Woodrow Wilson was born in Boston, Massachusetts in the year 1922. Wilson was inspired to create art because when he visited nearby museums as a teenager he didnt see anyone that looked like him.

Wilson wanted to show that people of color could also be beautiful and often portrayed people of color in his artwork. As a social realist artist Wilsons goal was to show racial injustice and to show the dignity and pride of persons of color. Wilson took art classes at his local boys club where he was mentored by current art students that were attending the School of the Museum of Fine Arts located in Boston. After the students showed some of Wilsons fantastic works to the faculty and they were impressed giving Wilson a scholarship immediately. Wilson went on to earn a B.

The artist also won awards and fellowships that allowed him to study abroad in Paris, France with modernist Fernand Leger. The artist taught at the collegiate level at Boston University. You may have seen John Woodrow Wilsons most renown work, a bronze sculpture of Dr.

Which is located in Washington D. Wilson beat out many other artists for this prestigious commission.

The work is the first image in the picture gallery. The artist was an outstanding and prolific printmaker.

John Woodrow Wilson passed away just a few days ago in late January of 2015. The artist was 92 years old.

Price range information: Sorry none available. Some other artists who worked in a similar style include Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Gwathmey, Jacob Lawrence, Charles White and Jack Levine. John Woodrow Wilson is included in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art located in New York City. Roxbury and painted, sculpted, and made prints out of his home studio in Brookline for decades.

Like much of his most important work, the bust brings viewers to the intersection of art and politics, of pure creativity and the desire to examine social injustice. Wilson, who was 92 when he died Thursday evening in his Brookline home, pursued that path since he was a boy on Roxburys streets, learning to sketch and honing a burgeoning talent that eventually would place his paintings and sculptures in the Museum of Fine Arts and far beyond. To me the eloquence of the piece is not only in the face, but in the rhythms of the gesture, Mr. Wilson told the Globe in 1986, just before the bust was unveiled in the Rotunda on what would have been Kings 57th birthday.

The head is tilted forward, as if to communicate with the viewer. I hope the sculpture will stimulate people to learn more about King, to perpetuate his struggle.

A 3-foot-tall bronze bust of the Rev. Is surely the most viewed creation of John Wilson.

Barry Chin/Globe Staff/File 1997 A 3-foot-tall bronze bust of the Rev. Wilsons own journey to prominence was fueled in part by his reaction to art he saw as a teenager during visits to the MFA. None of these people looked like me and just by omission the implication was that black people were not capable of being beautiful and true and precious, he told the Globe in 1995 when Dialogue: John Wilson/Joseph Norman, opened at the MFA and his own sculptures and sketches shared museum space with the work that drew his criticism years before. Of that show, Globe art critic Christine Temin wrote that Mr. Wilson emerges as a powerful artist, too little known for someone who has produced stellar work for half a century. Writing about Eternal Presence, a career survey of Mr. Wilsons work that opened in 2012 in Danforth Art, Globe art critic Sebastian Smee called him one of Bostons most esteemed and accomplished artists and wrote that from Mr.

Wilsons early sketches to his more recent large-scale charcoal drawings, the impulse has remained the same: It is an impulse toward clarity, toward truth. I think he will gain in importance as time goes on, said Katherine French, director emerita of Danforth Art, where several of Mr. Wilsons works remain on display through May 17. He will be recognized as a major artist of the 20th century.

I really have no doubt about that, added French, who has finished curating John Wilson: Bostons Native Son, a show that opens in the St. A self portrait of John Wilson from 1943. The second of five siblings, Mr. Wilson was born in 1922 in Roxbury, where his parents settled after emigrating from British Guiana and found little work once the Great Depression hit.

Wilson always was aware of racial inequities. His father regularly read African-American newspapers such as The Amsterdam News, which seemed to have images of lynchings in practically every other issue, Mr.

Wilson said in a 2012 interview with French, who wrote an essay about the artist that Danforth Art will soon publish. Drawn to art classes at Roxbury Memorial High School, Mr. Wilson was art editor of the school newspaper and took classes at the Boys Club from teachers who were students at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. They showed his work to faculty at the Museum school, which awarded a full scholarship to Mr. There, he counted among his teachers Karl Zerbe, a Boston Expressionist born in Germany.

Years later, critics would see early evidence of Mr. Wilsons talent in Boy with Bow Tie, drawn in his mid-teens. Wilson graduated from the Museum school with highest honors, and one of his works was included in The Negro Artist Comes of Age, an Albany Institute of History and Art exhibition. He taught at Boris Mirski modern art school in Boston and graduated in 1947 with a bachelors degree in education from Tufts University.

Among his key works during those years was a print depicting Bigger Thomas, the protagonist of Richard Wrights 1940 novel Native Son. Wilson also developed an admiration for Mexican muralists, particularly Jose Clemente Orozco. "John Wilson: Eternal Presence, " Danforth.

Nov 17-March 24 John Wilson, Suite of prints for Down by the Riverside, by Richard Wright: Death of Lulu, 2001, etching with aquatint. Courtesy, John and Julie Wilson. 23danforth Courtesy of John and Julie Wilson John Wilsons Death of Lulu, 2001.

Awarded a traveling fellowship from the MFA, Mr. Wilson moved to Paris and studied with the modern artist Fernand Leger. Wilson visited the Lower East Side in New York City, where he met Julie Kowitch, a teacher who had graduated from Brooklyn College.

They married in 1950 and went to Mexico on a John Hay Whitney Fellowship. As an interracial couple, they traveled by necessity in separate cars while passing through the segregated South. Though Orozco died a few months before he arrived in Mexico, Mr. A lasting work from this period was The Trial, a lithograph depicting three judges, their faces hidden behind white theatrical masks, looming vulture-like over a young black boy who stands awaiting judgment. Back in the United States, Mr. Wilson produced lithographs for unions in Chicago and taught in New York City before returning to Massachusetts in 1964 to teach at Boston University. Over the years, his work was included in exhibits at museums and galleries including the Museum of Fine Arts and Martha Richardson Fine Art on Newbury Street.

Wilson also worked to create the National Center of Afro-American Artists in Roxbury. Essentially, he felt that his main objective as an artist was to deliver a message to people about black dignity, about racial justice, about poor people trying to get a better deal in life, his wife said.

But also, sketching constantly on index cards and any available scrap of paper, Mr. Wilson composed portraits of family members, friends, and life unfolding around him. During one car trip to New York City with his daughter and infant grandson, he did a series of sketches of him over the backseat of the car, said his daughter Erica of Brookline. I have them framed in my hallway. A service will be announced for Mr.

Wilson, who in addition to his wife and daughter leaves a son, Roy, of Watertown; two brothers, Frederick and James, both of Los Angeles; and four grandchildren. Another daughter, Rebecca Wilson-Sealy, died last year.

A perfectionist in everything he did, Mr. Wilson was incredibly physical when he worked, his son recalled. He moved with tremendous energy.

Wilson wrapped the King sculpture in blankets and an old sleeping bag, tucked it into the back of his Mazda, and headed to the Capitol Rotunda. Before that trip, he had not stepped inside the Capitol building. Somehow it seemed like the epitome of the seat of power, and it alienated me, he told the Globe in 1986. I never felt part of it. But when I delivered the sculpture, that changed.

I felt, A piece of me is in that building. Wilson's outspoken commentary on the unequal response to injustices at home and abroad is played out in this complex, mural-like composition. Divided into two halves, the artist juxtaposes scenes of the war in Europe and the Holocaust (at left) with the persecution and killing of blacks in the United States (at right). Like many African Americans at the time, Wilson supported the government's war effort, but was angry that no reciprocal fight for freedom was being made on the homefront. John Woodrow Wilson Born in 1992, John Woodrow Wilson is a noted sculptor, painter, and printmaker, John Wilson is best known for his powerful portraits of African American men that results in vivid figurative images done in bronze, oil, charcoal, graphite and print.

Wilsons interest in figural art can be traced to his childhood in Roxbury, Massachusetts, where he took life drawing classes taught by students at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. In 1939, Wilson was accepted into the school on a full scholarship. He studied with the German émigré artist Karl Zerbe, who exposed Wilson to German Expressionist art and encouraged him to explore social issues in his work. In 1943, when he was 21, Wilson created a revolutionary series called Deliver Us from Evil, which conflated images of Nazi oppression of the Jews with depictions of social injustices against blacks in America. While he continued to explore themes of racial discrimination and class oppression, Wilson developed a greater international focus and an interest in monumental art through his studies in Paris and Mexico. Wilson also helped to develop the art department at Boston University, where he served as a professor until 1986. After his retirement from academia, Wilson began making prints with James Stroud at the Center Street Studio in Boston, including a suite of etchings that illustrate Richard Wrights short story Down by the Riverside and several prints based on his monumental sculpture Eternal Presence and on the King commission.

(Boston, MA, 1922-Boston, MA, 2014). Adoff, Arnold and JOHN WILSON illus. New York: Thomas Y Crowell Co. Children's biography of Malcolm X.

Clark Atlanta University Art Galleries. JOHN WILSON in Conversation: The Atlanta University Art Annuals. Review: Cate McQuaid, Boston Globe, October 16, 2012. JOHN WILSON: Prints and Drawings. Solo exhibition of work spanning Wilson's long career.

Review: Cate McQuaid, "A Human Touch, " The Boston Globe, April 7, 2010. Museum of the National Center of Afro-American Artists. Eternal Presence: JOHN WILSON Paintings. JOHN WILSON: Father and Child. Outside the Media Arts Building, Roxbury Community College.

School of the Museum of Fine Arts. December 6, 2012-March 24, 2013. Important retrospective with 84 drawings, prints, sculptures, and oils.

Review: Sebastian Smee, "John Wilson: Clear and Present, " Boston Globe, November 29, 2012. JOHN WILSON: Martin Luther King Series. Solo exhibition of oil paintings from France, lithographs and watercolors from Mexico, the print series "Down by the Riverside" and individual prints celebrating Dr. Review: Chris Bergeron, "For Roxbury artist John Wilson, seeing is creating, " Milford Daily News, February 22, 2009. GEORGE, JEAN CRAIGHEAD and JOHN WILSON illus. Spring Comes to the Ocean. Illustrated book about a myriad of ocean life. 8vo 8.5 x 5.5 in. Taylor Gallery, North Carolina A&T State University. Monuments of Humanity: The Art of JOHN WILSON. Solo exhibition of sculpture, drawings and prints, representing over sixty years of art-making.

Faulconer Gallery, Bucksbaum Center for Arts, Grinnell College. 41 color plates, 6 b&w illus. Texts by Pamela Franks and Dave Williams including interview with Wilson by Saadi A. 4to 11 x 8.5 in.

Hamalian, Leo and James V. In: Artist and Influence 5 (1987):92-97. Freedomways: A Quarterly Review of the Freedom Movement: Vol. In: Art New England, Vol. A Capital Career: JOHN WILSON Expresses the Spirit of Black Americans.

In: The Boston Phoenix, March 12, 1993. JOHN WILSON: Reality is not a Fad. In: Boston Sunday Globe, September 5, 1971:4A.

Wright, Richard and JOHN WILSON (etchings). New York: The Limited Editions Club, 2000.

A fine press edition of one of the five stories that constituted Richard Wright's first book Uncle Tom's Children. The text, selected by the well-known Boston printmaker John Wilson, is illustrated with five highly emotional full-page original etchings with aquatint in black and blue, specially created for this livre d'artiste. Limited numbered edition of 300 signed by Wilson in the colophon.

The etchings were also issued as a separate print portfolio containing additional etchings not included in the book, each print individually numbered and signed in an edition of 60. Oblong folio (12 1/4 x 16 inches), blue cloth, lettered in black, in matching cloth-covered portfolio folding box lined in black. BOB BLACKBURN and the Printmaking Workshop. In: Black American Literature Forum 20, No. 1/2 (Spring - Summer, 1986):81-95.

Includes brief mention of Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Robin Holder (with photo), Mohammad O. Khalil, Norman Lewis, Otto Neals, Mavis Pusey, Vincent Smith and John Wilson. GENERAL BOOKS AND GROUP EXHIBITIONS. Albany Institute of History and Art.

The Negro Artist Comes of Age: A National Survey of Contemporary American Artists. Checklist of 76 works by 38 artists, with 14 others mentioned as well. Foreword by John Davis Hatch, Jr. Essay "Up Till Now" by Alain Locke who states that the show is both a representative and challenging cross-section of contemporary American art and, additionally, convincing evidence of the Negros maturing racial and cultural self-expression in painting and sculpture. The exhibition coincided with the last months of WWII and the return of the troops.

Artists mentioned or included: Charles Alston, William Artis, Henry (Mike) Bannarn, Edward M. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Eloise Bishop, Selma Burke, William S. Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr. Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Robert S.

Duncanson, Frederick Flemister, Meta Warrick Fuller, Rex Goreleigh, William A. Harper, Palmer Hayden, James Herring, May Howard Jackson, Joshua Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Edward L.

Motley, Frank Neal, Marion Perkins, Horace Pippin, James A. Scott, Charles Sebree, Thelma Streat, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Dox Thrash, Laura Wheeler Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Vernon Winslow, Hale Woodruff. Traveled to: Brooklyn Museum of Art. Locke's essay is reprinted in: The Critical Temper of Alain Locke.

A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. Woodson, The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 2 (April 1945):227-228; "The Negro Artist Comes of Age, " ARTnews (February 1-14, 1945) reprinted in ARTnews 91 (November 1992):109-10. 8vo 9 x 6 in.

Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Exeter Academy. To Conserve a Legacy: American Art from Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Powell, Jock Reynolds; intro by Kinshasha Holman. Includes painting, sculpture, and photographs by over 90 artists and historic photographs, gathered from the collection of 6 important university collections: Clark, Fisk, Hampton, Howard, N. A major publication on African American Art.

Includes among others: William E. Bedou, John Biggers, Edmund Bruce, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr.

Allan Rohan Crite, Frederick C. Freelon, Otis Galbreath, Sam Gilliam, Humbert Howard, Clementine Hunter, Wilmer A.

Jennings, Malvin Gray Johnson, William H. Johnson, Edmonia Lewis, Rose Piper, Horace Pippin, Prentiss H. Robinson, Charles Sallee, Augusta Savage, William Edouard Scott, Charles Sebree, Alvin Smith, white artist Prentiss Taylor, James Lesesne Wells, Hale Woodruff. Black Dimensions in Contemporary American Art.

New York: NAL Plume, 1971. Includes fifty (thirteen women) contemporary artists with brief informative notes on each. A broad range of style and subject matter.

Includes: Benny Andrews, Calvin Bailey, John T. Biggers, Arthur Britt, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Arthur Carraway, Bernie Casey, Don Concholar, Mary Reed Daniel, Alonzo Davis, Juette Day, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Eugenia Dunn, Marion Epting, Russell T. Gordon, David Hammons, Phillip Hampton, Marvin Harden, Wilbur Haynie, Richard Hunt, Barbara J. Jones (Hogu), Lois Mailou Jones, Eddie Jack Jordan, Sr.

Lemuel Joyner, Henri Linton, Jimmy Mosley, Ademola Olugebefola, John Outterbridge, William Pajaud, James D. Parks, Delilah Pierce, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Lucille D. (Malkia) Roberts, Arthur Rose, Nancy Rowland, Marion Sampler, Jewel Simon, Ray Saunders, Leo Twiggs, Alma Thomas, Vincent D.

Vaughn, James Watkins, Charles White, Garrett Whyte, John W. 8vo 8 x 5.4 in. Atlanta University Contemporary Art Collection. Prizewinners: 1942: William Carter, Frederick C.

Loper, Charles Alston, Lois Mailou Jones; 1943: John Wilson, Hughie Lee-Smith, Mark Hewitt, Henry W. John Farrar, John Wilson, Walter W. Neal, Vernon Winslow, William E. Artis, Selma Burke, Mark Hewitt, James Dallas Parks, John Wilson; 1945: Henry W.

Bannarn, John Wilson, Frederick Flemister, John N. Brown (as Marjorie), William E.

Artis, Richmond Barthé, Mark Hewitt, Jenelsie Walden Holloway (as Jenelse Walden), Margaret G. Burroughs (as Margaret Goss); 1946: Joseph Delaney, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, Franklin M. Shands (painting), Leonard Cooper, Franklin M. Shands (watercolor), Richmond Barthé, Elizabeth Catlett, Charles White, Wilmer Jennings, Roy DeCarava; 1947: Frank H.

Frank Neal, John Wilson, Joseph D. Atkinson, Calvin Burnett, Julia Ann Fields, William Artis, Samella Sanders (Lewis), H. Wyley; 1948: Henry Bannarn, Rose Piper, Jacob Lawrence, Clarence Shivers, Calvin Burnett, William E. Pajaud, Richmond Barthé, Houston E. Chandler (sculpture), Bob Blackburn, Houston E. Oubré; 1949: Lois Mailou Jones, Cecil D. Romeyn Van Vleck Lippman, Walter A.

Stallings, Jewel Simon, Charles White, Samella Sanders (Lewis), James H. Malone; 1950: John Howard, James Reuben Reed, Merton D.

Simpson, William Hayden, Warren L. Rhoden, Samella Sanders (Lewis), Bob Blackburn, John T. Stallings, Charles White, Charles W. John Wilson; 1952: Harvey W. Fred Jones, Ernest Crichlow, Samuel A. Countee, Lois Mailou Jones, Donald H. Artis, John Wilson, Elizabeth Catlett, Patricia C. Goodwin, Charles White, Romeyn Van Vleck Lippman, Jewel Woodward (as Woodard) Simon, John T. Daniel; 1954: Jean Flowers, Romeyn Van Vleck Lipmann, Frederick D. Phillips, John Wilson (watercolor), Henry Bannarn, Jack Jordan, Margaret S. Collins, John Wilson (print), Charles W. Rice, John Wilson, James Yeargans, Lois Mailou Jones, Margaret T. Burroughs, Archie Taylor, Henry W. Bannarn, Jewel Woodward (as Woodard) Simon, Howard E.

Lewis, Jimmie Mosely, Robert A. Hooper, Marion Perkins, Elizabeth Catlett, Samella Sanders Lewis, Calvin Burnett, Charles W.

Stallings; 1957: Thomas Jefferson Flanagan, Benjamin Britt, Geraldine McCullough, Walter Wallace, Jewel Woodard Simon, John Wilson (watercolor), Hayward L. Oubré (sculpture), Jack Jordan, John Wilson (print), Hayward L. Clark, James Watkins, Cullen C. Lowe, Benjamin Britt, June Hector, William S. Miller, Gregory Ridley, Barbara L.

Price, Zenobia Hammonds; 1959: David C. Braxton, James Yeargans, James Watkins, Vivian Williams, Leedell Moorehead, William E. Artis, Alfred Stevenson, Hubert C. 8vo, blue paper covers, lettered in brown.

Eleventh Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists. Jones, Ernest Crichlow, Samuel A. Others in show included: Delilah Pierce, Walter Agustus Simon, Alma Thomas, et al.

Fourth Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists. Prize winners included: Henry W. Bannarn, John Wilson (first prize winner), Frederick Flemister, John N. Burroughs (as Margaret Goss); others included: Robert Willis, Pauline Clay, Hughie Lee-Smith, Vernon Winslow, Ellis Wilson, et al. Review: Time magazine, April 9, 1945; and NYT review.

Second Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists. Prize winners included: John Wilson, Hughie Lee-Smith, Mark Hewitt, Henry W. Others included: William Harris Fletcher, and many more. Sixth Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists.

Atkinson, Calvin Burnett, Julia Ann Fields, William Artis, Samella Sanders (Lewis), Houston E. Tenth Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists.

Simpson (Charles Hope Landscape Award), Walter A. Simon (Best of Show - figure painting), Hale A. Woodruff (Painting award), William E.

Artis (Sculpture award), Richard W. Dempsey (Popular vote winner), Donald H. Stallings, Charles White (Graphic arts award), Charles W. Third Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints by Negro Artists: The Two Generations. Artists included: Charles Alston, William E.

Artis, Annabelle Baker, Mike Bannarn, Romare Bearden (Honorable Mention), John T. Biggers, Selma Burke, Calvin Burnett, William S. Carter, Claude Clark, Francis P. Conch, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Mary Tobias Daniel, Roy DeCarava, Arthur Diggs, Lillian Dorsey, John Farrar top prize - Ferrar was 16 yrs.

Flemister, Charlotte Franklin, Charles Haig, Vertis C. Hayes, Mark Hewitt, Jenelsie Holloway, John Miller Howard, Sargent Johnson, Henry Bozeman Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Clarence Lawson, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Frank Neal, Cecil D. Smith, Clyde Turner, John E. Washington, Ora Washington, Albert Wells, James Lesesne Wells, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson (Atlanta University award), Vernon Winslow, Hale Woodruff, Frank Wyley, et al.

Review: Art News, May 1, 1944:7. Fine Arts Building, Spelman College. Brooks, Calvin Burnett, David Driskell, Leon Hicks, James Edward Jones, Ted Jones, Geraldine McCullough, Edward McCluney, Norma Morgan, Joseph Ross, John Wilson. Of work by Burnett, Brooks, Hicks, T. African American Art in Atlanta: Public and Corporate Collections.

Checklist of 72 works by 50 artists, including numerous women artists. Includes: Jim Adair, Terry Adkins, Benny Andrews, William Artis, Ellsworth Ausby, Herman Kofi Bailey, Romare Bearden, Shirley Bolton, Beverly Buchanan, Elizabeth Catlett, Floyd Coleman, Allan Rohan Crite, Michael Cummings, Joseph Delaney, Robert Duncanson, Tina Marie Dunkley, Sam Gilliam, Michael Harris, Jenelsie Holloway, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Viola Burley-Leak, Larry Francis Lebby, Samella Lewis, Arturo Lindsay, Jerome Meadows, John M.

Howard, Lev Mills, Sana Musasama, Curtis Patterson, Maurice Pennington, Robert Edwin Peppers, K. Joy Ballard-Peters, Howardena Pindell, John Riddle, John D.

Robinson, Betye Saar, Thomas Shaw, Jewel W. Simon, Freddie Styles, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Carlton Omar Thompson, Yvonne Thompson, Charles White, Claudia Widdis, Sandra Kate Williams, John Wilson, and Hale Woodruff. 8vo 22 x 22 cm; 8.5 x 8.5 in.

Selected Essays: Art & Artists from the Harlem Renaissance to the 1980's. Texts by Richard Long, M.

Leslie King-Hammond, Gylbert Coker, Lisa Tuttle, Richard Hunt, Beverly Buchanan, Lucinda H. Gedeon, Amalia Amaki, Published to accompany the inaugural exhibition of the National Black Arts Festival. 145 featured artists include: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, William Anderson, Benny Andrews, Anna Arnold, John W. Arterbery, William Artis, Ellsworth Ausby, Herman Kofi Bailey, Henry Bannarn, Ellen Banks, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Garry Bibbs, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Shirley Bolton, Michael D.

Browne, Beverly Buchanan, Calvin Burnett, David Butler, Carole Byard, Felix Casas, David Mora Catlett, Elizabeth Catlett, Colin Chase, Ed Clark, Kevin Cole, Larry W. Collins, Noel Copeland, Lonnie Crawford, Robert S. Duncanson, Damballah (Dolphus Smith), Alonzo Davis, Roy DeCarava, Joseph Delaney, Chuck Douglas, Sam Doyle, David C.

Dupree, Melvin Edwards, Michael Ellison, Jonathan Eubanks, James Few, Thomas Jefferson Flanagan, Frederick C. Gaines, IV, Herbert Gentry, Eddie M. Granderson, Kevin Hamilton, Michael Harris, William Harris, Palmer Hayden, William M.

Holloway, Manuel Hughes, Margo Humphrey, Malvin G. Johnson, Frederick Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Seitu Ken Jones, Jack Jordan, Robert W.

Kelly, Gary Jackson Kirksey, Frank D. Knox, Jacob Lawrence, Spencer Lawrence, Thomas Laidman, Ron Lee, Roosevelt Lenard, Leon Leonard, Samella Lewis, Henri Linton, Romeyn Van Vleck Lippman, Juan Logan, Ulysses Marshall, Richard Mayhew, Geraldine McCullough, Juanita Miller, Gary Lewis Moore, George W. Neal, Otis Neals, Cecil D.

Nichols, Hayward Oubré, John Payne, Maurice Pennington, K. Joy Ballard-Peters, Howardena Pindell, John Pinderhughes, Gary Porter, Hugh Lawrence Potter, Richard J. Price, Mavis Pusey, Patricia Ravarra, James Reuben Reed, Calvin Reid, Patricia Richardson, Gregory D. Faith Ringgold, Malkia Roberts, Christopher Wade Robinson, John D. Robertson, Sandra Rowe, Mahler B.

Ryder, Martysses Rushin, JoeSam, Jewel W. Simon, Karl Sinclair, William G. Smith, Hughie Lee-Smith, Mary T. Smith, Mei Tei-Sing Smith, Henry Spiller, Freddie L.

Tanner, James'Son' Thomas, Phyllis Thompson, Chris Walker, King Walker, Larry Walker, Delores West, Charles White, Charlotte Riley-Webb, Emmett Wigglesworth, Carleton F. Wilkinson, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, Stanley C. Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde. Boston Modern: Figurative Expressionism as Alternative Modernism.

University of New Hampshire, 2005. John Wilson, who worked for decades alongside the major proponents of expressionism in Boston at Boston University, is mentioned only in passing although each reference mentions how much his fellow students and colleagues admired his skill. It appears that the author did not think his work was expressionist. Includes biographies of John E. Barbour, Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Joel Hannah (the only known listing), Harriet Kennedy, J. Marcus Mitchell, Georgiana Powell (presumably Georgette Seabrook Powell), Gary Rickson, Henry Washington, John Wilson. Syncopated Rhythms: 20th-Century African American Art from the George and Joyce Wein Collection. November 18, 2005-January 22, 2006. Curated with text by Patricia Hills and catalogue entries by Hills and Melissa Renn; foreword by Ed Bradley.

Includes 60 works paintings, sculpture, drawings and a painted story quilt. Exhibition of a range of works done in the late 1920s through the 1990s and is particularly strong in works of the 1940s-'70s.

Artists include: Charles Alston, Benny Andrews, Ernie Barnes, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Bruce Brice, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Miles Davis, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Minnie Evans, Palmer Hayden, Oliver Johnson, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Wifredo Lam, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Sister Gertrude Morgan, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Augusta Savage, Bob Thompson, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T.

Williams, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff and Richard Yarde. 4to 28 x 22 cm. Workshop Traditions: Printmaking in Boston Since 1960. Afro-American Artists: New York and Boston. Of work by 69 artists, exhib.

Co-curated by Edmund Barry Gaither and artist Barnet Rubinstein. Includes: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Malcolm Bailey, Ellen Banks, Romare Bearden, Robert Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Ronald Boutte, Lynn Bowers, Frank Bowling, Marvin Brown, Calvin Burnett, Dana C. Chandler, John Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, Avel DeKnight, Henry DeLeon, Milton Derr (as Milton Johnson), Stanley Pinckney, James Denmark, Reginald Gammon, Felrath Hines, Alvin C.

Hollingsworth, Bill Howell, Zell Ingram, Gerald Jackson, Daniel L. Johnson, Ben Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Tonnie O.

Jones, Cliff Joseph, Harriet Kennedy, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Edward McCluney, Jr. Algernon Miller, Joe Overstreet, Louise Parks, Stanley Pinckney, Jerry Pinkney, John W. Rhoden, Bill Rivers, Mahler Ryder, Raymond Saunders, Thomas Sills, Alfred J.

Smith, Richard Stroud, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, Lovett Thompson, Russ Thompson, Lloyd Toone, Luther Vann, Paul Waters, Richard Waters, Jack White, Yvonne Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde. Jubilee: Afro-American Artists on Afro-America. 4 color plates, plus frontis. For each artist, exhibition checklist. Includes: Charles Alston, Benny Andrews, Kwasi Seitu Asante, Roland Ayers, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Barkley Hendricks, Earl Hooks, Arnold James Hurley, Milton Johnson (aka Milton Derr), William H.

Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Pierre Le Clere, Archibald Motley, Nefertiti, James Phillips, Anderson Pigatt, Faith Ringgold, Augusta Savage, Charles Searles, Afred J. Edgar Sorrells, Nelson Stevens, Barbara Ward, Richard Watson, Pheoris West, Charles White, John Wilson, and Richard Yarde.

, stapled lime green wraps, lettered in black. 34 artists (8 women) represented and numerous others discussed: Ellen Banks, Ronald Boutte, Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Allan Rohan Crite, Henry DeLeon, Milton Derr, Robert Freeman, Meta Warrick Fuller, George Ganges, Tyrone Geter, Paul Goodnight, Lois Mailou Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Kofi Kayiga, Harriet Kennedy, Marcia Lloyd, Vusumuzi Maduna, Edward McCluney, Bryan McFarlane, Taylor McLean, Alvin Paige, Benjamin Peterson, James Reuben Reed, Nelson Stevens, Richard Stroud, James Toatley, William Travis, Barbara Ward, René Westbrook, Clarence Washington, John Wilson, Richard Yarde, Theresa India Young. Others mentioned in the text include Scipio Moorhead, Joshua Johnson, Edmonia Lewis, Edward Mitchell Bannister, Sargent Johnson, Edwin Harleston, Stanley Pinckney, Alfred Smith, Dolores Johnson, Fern Cunningham, Karen Eutemy, George Cook, Nefertiti, Deirdre Bibby, Gary Rickson, Sharon Dunn, Elliot Knight, Yantee Bell, Arnold Hurley, Boston muralist James Brown, Suzanne Thompson, Roy Cato, Jr. Lovett Thompson, John Keyes, Benjamin Peterson, Michael Coblyn, Diane Wignall, Kofi Bailey, James Phillips, Edgar Sorrells, Archibald Motley, Pheoris West; photos of Benny Andrews, Camille Billops, Ernest Crichlow, Barkley Hendricks. Gold, NYT, January 26, 1988.

Museum of Fine Arts and Museum of the National Center of Afro-American Artists. Dialogue: John Wilson / Joseph Norman.

Published in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, July 21-December 3, 1995. 4to 10.5 x 8.3 in. Black Artists in New England I & II.

Group exhibition of approximately 134 works. Part I: Richard Allen, Ellen Banks, Theodore Barco, William C. Broadus, Pat Clark, Joseph De Cruz, John S. Edmund, Melvyn Ettrick, Robert Freeman, Tommy Gibbs, Chickie Glover, Paul Goodnight, William Hagbourne, Arnold J. Horcey, James Edward Jackson, III, Delores Johnson, Harriet Kennedy, James C.

Pires, Aliayo Pryor, Shaifo Pryor, Carl Richardson, Gary Rickson, Ronald A. Roland, Taura Sharif, Lovett Thompson, Robert William Thornell, Melvyn D. Part II: Richard Allen, Dorothy Anderson, Edward Battle, Dan Bolling, Richard Boman, Calvin Burnett, Chester A. Dames, Clarence Leroy Hinds, Stinson?

Ingram, Carrie Jackson, Sandy Middlebrooks, Robert C. Pitts, Thom Shepard, Gregory Tidwell, Melvin D. Tyler, Clarence Washington, Henry Washington, John Wilson. Northeastern University Art Gallery, AAMARP Department Galleries. Group exhibition by artists in the Northeastern University African American Residency program. Included: Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Allan Rohan Crite, Milton Derr, Paul Goodnight, Kofi Kayiga, Marcia Lloyd, Vusumuzi Maduna, Jim Reed [James Reuben Reed], René Westbrook, John Wilson. MoCADA Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art. Artists included: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Grafton Tyler Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret T. Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, David C. Driskell, Allan Freelon, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Linda Hiwot, Robin Holder, Albert Huey, Mary Howard Jennings, Wilmer Jennings, William H. Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Ronald Joseph, Paul Keene, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Whitfield Lovell, Richard Mayhew, Lev T. Montgomery, Otto Neals, Hayward Oubré, Howardena Pindell, Vincent Smith, Dread Scott, William E. Scott, Lou Stovall, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, Ruth Waddy, Cheryl Warrick, James Lesesne Wells, John Wilson, Charles White, Hale Woodruff. Who's Who in American Art 16. Curators who are not also artists are included in this bibliographic entry but are not otherwise listed in the database: We are NOT going to go through all of these volumes over the decades; this one is catalogued simply to record the degree to which living African American artists had entered the conciousness of the mainstream American art world as of 1984. Should be consulted along with Falk's Who Was Who in American Art (1985) to complete the "awareness list" as of the mid-1980s. 160 artists are included here along with 1000 pages of far more obscure white artists: p. 21, Benny Andrews, 33, Ellsworth Ausby, 50, Richmond Barthé; 57, Romare Bearden, 76, John Biggers, 83, Betty Blayton, 98, Frank Bowling, 108, Arthur Britt, 112, Wendell Brooks, 116, Marvin Brown, 117-18, Vivian Browne, 121, Linda Goode Bryant, 128, Calvin Burnett, 129, Margaret Burroughs, 132, Carole Byard, 133, Walter Cade, 148, Yvonne Pickering Carter, 168, Claude Clark, 178-79, Floyd Coleman, 179, Robert Colescott, 181, Paul Collins, 184, James Conlon, 188-89, Arthur Coppedge; 191, Eldzier Cortor, Averille Costley-Jacobs, 198, Allan Crite; 210, D'Ashnash-Tosi [Barbara Chase-Riboud], 213-14, Alonzo Davis, 219-20, Roy DeCarava, 222, Avel DeKnight, 226, Richard Dempsey, 228, Murry DePillars, 237, Raymond Dobard, 239, Jeff Donaldson, 243, John Dowell, 246, David Driskell, 256, Allan Edmunds, 256-57, James Edwards, 260, David Elder, 265, Whitney John Engeran, 267, Marion Epting, 270, Burford Evans, 271, Minnie Evans, 271-72, Frederick Eversley, 277, Elton Fax, 304, Charlotte Franklin, 315, Edmund Barry Gaither (curator), 317, Reginald Gammon, 325, Herbert Gentry, 326, Joseph Geran, 328, Henri Ghent (curator), 332, Sam Gilliam, 346, Russell Gordon, 354, Rex Goreleigh, 361, Eugene Grigsby, 375, Robert Hall, 380, Leslie King-Hammond (curator), 381, Grace Hampton, 385, Marvin Harden, 406, Barkley Hendricks, 418, Leon Hicks, 414, Freida High-Wasikhongo, 424-25, Al Hollingsworth, 428, Earl Hooks, 433, Humbert Howard, 439, Richard Hunt, 450, A. Jackson, Oliver Jackson; 451, Suzanne Jackson, 454, Catti James, Frederick James, 464, Lester L. Johnson; 467, Ben Jones, 467-68, Calvin Jones, 469, James Edward Jones, Lois Jones, 471, Theodore Jones, 489, Paul Keene; 492, James Kennedy, 495-96, Virginia Kiah, 535, Raymond Lark, 540-41, Jacob Lawrence, 546, Hughie Lee-Smith, 557, Samella Lewis, 586, Cheryl Ilene McClenney arts admin. , 595, Anderson Macklin, 620, Philip Lindsay Mason, 625, Richard Mayhew, 597, Oscar McNary, 598, Kynaston McShine (curator), 610, 637, Marianne Miles a. Marianne; 638, Earl Miller, 640-41, Lev Mills, 649, Evangeline Montgomery; 653, Norma Morgan, 655, Keith Morrison, 657, Dewey Mosby (curator), 671, Otto Neals, 693, Ademola Olugebefola, 700, Hayward Oubré, John Outterbridge, Wallace Owens, 702, William Pajaud, 706, James Parks, 710, Curtis Patterson, 711, Sharon Patton (curator), 711-12, John Payne, 720, Regenia Perry (curator), 724, Bertrand Phillips; 727, Delilah Pierce, 728, Vergniaud Pierre-Noël, 729, Stanley Pinckney, Howardena Pindell, 744, Leslie Price, Arnold Prince, 747, Mavis Pusey, 752, Bob Ragland, 759, Roscoe Reddix, 763, Robert Reid, 768, John Rhoden, 772, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, 774, Faith Ringgold, 778, Lucille Roberts, 803, Mahler Ryder, 804, Betye Saar, 815, Raymond Saunders, 834, John Scott, 841, James Sepyo, 857, Thomas Sills, 859, Jewel Simon, 861, Merton Simpson, Lowery Sims (curator); 865, Van Slater, 869, Dolph Smith, 873, Vincent Smith, 886, Francis Sprout, 890-91, Shirley Stark, 898, Nelson Stevens, 920, Luther Stovall, 909, Robert Stull, 920, Ann Tanksley, James Tanner, 924, Rod Taylor, 922, William Bradley Taylor [Bill Taylor], 929, Elaine Thomas, 946, Curtis Tucker, 949, Leo Twiggs, 970, Larry Walker, 977, James Washington, 979, Howard Watson, 994, Amos White, 995, Franklin White, 996 Tim Whiten, 1001-2, Chester Williams, 1003, Randolph Williams, Todd Williams, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, 1005, Edward Wilson, George Wilson, 1005-6, John Wilson, 1007, Frank Wimberley, 1016, Rip Woods, 1017, Shirley Woodson, 1019, Bernard Wright, 1025, Charles Young, 1026, Kenneth Young, Milton Young.

Foreword by Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. A pictorial review of the African American contribution to American life. Includes: Alonzo Aden, Charles Alston, William E. Artist, Henry Bannarn, Edward M.

Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Eloise Bishop, Bob Blackburn, Emile Broussard, Selma Burke, Elmer Simms Campbell, George Washington Carver, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Charles C. Davis, Charles Dawson, Aaron Douglas, Robert S. Charley Rosenberg Foster, Allan R. Freelon, Rex Goreleigh, Bernard Goss, William T. Goss, Palmer Hayden, Zell Ingram, Joshua Johnson, Sargent Claude Johnson, John H. Jones, Joseph Kersey, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Archibald J. Edgar Patience, Horace Pippin, John Rhoden, Augusta Savage, Albert Alexander Smith, Alma G. 1878; china painter; the only known source for this artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Laura Wheeler Waring, Mme. Toussaint Welcome the only known source for this artist, active Jamaica, NY, with illus.

203, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. Review: The Crisis, November 1957:579. Chicago: American Library Association, 1977. Lipscomb, George Washington Carver; Tom Feelings--Julius Lester, To Be a Slave; George Ford--Humphrey Harman, Tales Told Near a Crocodile; Milton Johnson--Margaret Coit, Andrew Jackson; Olivia Coolidge, Men of Athens; Erik Haugaard, The Little Fishes; John Steptoe--Stevie; Mozelle Thompson--James Weldon Johnson and J.

Rosamond Johnson, Lift Every Voice and Sing; John Wilson--Jean George, Spring Comes to the Ocean [Igoe]. 2: Sculpture of the Americas, the Orient, Africa, the Pacific area, and the classical world.

Artis, Henry Bannarn, Richmond Barthé, Leslie Bolling, Selma Burke, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, William Edmondson, Meta Vaux Fuller, Richard Hunt, May Howard Jackson, Sargent Johnson, Joseph Kersey, Edmonia Lewis, Guy L. Miller, Hayward Oubre, Marion Perkins, John W. Ridley, Augusta Savage, Carroll Simms, Daniel Warburg, Eugene Warburg, John Wilson. Driskell Center, University of Maryland. Embodied: Black Identities in American Art from the Yale University Art Gallery. Texts by Pamela Franks and Robert E. Included: Jean-Michel Basquiat, Willie Cole, Elizabeth Catlett, David Driskell, Henry Gudgell, Barkley Hendricks, Felrath Hines, Whitfield Lovell, Kerry James Marshall, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Michael B. Platt, Alison Saar, Lorna Simpson, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, John Wilson. Traveled to: Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT, February 18-June 26, 2011.

Review: Martha Schwendener, "Show for Black Artists (Even Those Disliking Label), " NYT (Connecticut edition), May 20, 2011:11. 8.4 x 5.8 in. University of Maryland Art Gallery.

Successions: Prints by African-American Artists from the Jean and Robert Steele Collection. 26 color & b&w illus.

Checklist of 62 works by 45 artists, glossary of terms. Driskell; statement by the collectors, text by Adrienne L. Includes: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Moe Brooker, Calvin Burnett, Nora Mae Carmichael, Elizabeth Catlett, Kevin Cole, Robert Colescott, Allan Rohan Crite, Louis Delsarte, David Driskell, Allan Edmunds, Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam, Varnette Honeywood, Margo Humphrey, Paul Keene, Wadsworth Jarrell, Lois Mailou Jones, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Percy B. Martin, Tom Miller, Evangeline Montgomery, Keith Morrison, Joseph Norman, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Anita Philyaw, Stephanie Pogue, John T. Riddle, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Preston Sampson, Frank Smith, Vincent Smith, Lou Stovall, James L.

Traveled to: Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, AL; David Driskell Center, University of Maryland. 4to 11 x 8.5 in. Exhibition of prints from Bob Blackburn's workshop, assembled by Richard Mayhew. Includes Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Vivian Browne, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Richard Hunt, Mohammed Omer Khalil, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Stephanie Pogue, Mavis Pusey, Vincent D.

Wigfall, John Wilson, Wendy Wilson. Fine Arts Gallery, Benedict College.

Columbia Collects: African American Art Collected by the Citizens of Columbia. Curated by collector Marjorie Hammock. Includes: Richard Barclay, Romare Bearden, Lashun Beal, Beverly Buchanan, John Biggers, Bob Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Virginia Cox, Ernest Crichlow, Willis (Bing) Davis, Roy DeCarava, Herbert Gentry, Floyd Gordon, Jonathan Green, Jessie Guinyard, Al Hollingsworth, Jacob Lawrence, Bob Lanier, Larry Lebby, Norman Lewis, Arthur Rose, Leo Twiggs, Alvin Staley, John Lockheart, Samuel Osumba, John Mitchell, Adrienne S. Patel, Colin Quashie, Alabados Luis Franca, Pheoris West, James Wilder, Adewale Williams, Cecil Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff.

Den Haag Sculptuur 2007 De Overkant / Down Under. Wright Museum of African American History. In the Spirit of Martin: The Living Legacy of Dr. Washington, DC: SITES and Atlanta: Tinwood Books, 2002. Glossary of people, places, and events, artist biogs. The catalogue for a traveling exhibition containing a wide range of visual artists' responses to the life of Martin Luther King. By Nikki Giovanni; texts by Helen Shannon, Walter Leonard, Stanley Crouch, June Jordan, Julius Lester, John Lewis, Bernice Johnson Reagon, and others.

Includes 120 works by important African American and white artists. Included are artists as diverse as Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Phoebe Beasley, Anthony Bonair, John T. Biggers, Willie Birch, Elizabeth Catlett, Thornton Dial, Sr. Dixon, L'Merchie Frazier, Reginald Gammon, Reginald Gee, Sam Gilliam, Chester Higgins, Jr.

Jacob Lawrence, Glenn Ligon, Kerry James Marshall, Lev T. Mills, Gordon Parks, Elliott Pinkney, Howardena Pindell, Martin Puryear, Faith Ringgold, Raymond Saunders, Beuford Smith, Alma W.

Thomas, Charles White, Jack Whitten, John Wilson, et al. Traveled to the Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, FL, September 7-December 1, 2002; Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis, MN, January 19-April 6, 2003; International Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, May 15-July 27, 2003; Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, TN, August 30-November 9, 2003; and Montgomery Museum of Fine Art, Montgomery, AL, January 3-March 28, 2004. 12 x 9.5 in.

New York: New York Graphic Society, 1960. By Maureen Dover, index of artists and works, general index. Ground-breaking study, still extremely important for illustrations of work by artists not illustrated elsewhere, and many others mentioned as well. Includes (some with only brief mention): John Henry Adams, Jr.

Alonzo Aden, William Artis, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Robert Blackburn, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase, Irene Clark, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Charles C. Davis, Beauford Delaney, Richard Dempsey, Aaron Douglas, Robert Duncanson, Elton Fax, Meta Warrick Fuller, Rex Goreleigh, Eugene Grigsby, Jr. Hobbs (now known to be white), Alvin Hollingsworth, Earl Hooks, Humbert Howard, Julien Hudson, Richard Hunt, May Howard Jackson, Wilmer Jennings, Malvin Gray Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Lois Mailou Jones, Jack Jordan, Joseph Kersey, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Edward Loper, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald Motley, Haywood Oubré, Marion Perkins, Harper Phillips, Horace Pippin, James Porter, Patrick Reason, John Rhoden, John Robinson, Walter Sanford, Augusta Savage, Charles Sebree, Carroll Simms, Merton Simpson, William Simpson, Henry O. Tanner, Alma Thomas, Dox Thrash, Eugene Warburg, James Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, Stan Williamson, Ed Wilson, Edwin E. Wilson, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. Reviews: Margaret Burroughs, Freedomways 1 (Spring 1961):107-110; Romare Bearden, Leonardo [Oxford, England] 3 Apr. Louis, MO 34 (May 1961):140-141.

Two Centuries of Black American Art. Los Angeles: Museum of Art, 1976. Groundbreaking survey exhibition of African American art.

Texts by Driskell; catalogue notes by Leonard Simon. Includes Dave the Potter, Charles H. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Grafton Tyler Brown, David Butler, Selma Burke, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Thomas Day, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Robert S. Duncanson, William Edmondson, Minnie Evans, Edwin A. Harleston, Palmer Hayden, Felrath Hines, Earl J.

Hooks, Julien Hudson, Clementine Hunter, Wilmer Jennings, James Butler Johnson, Joshua Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Sam Middleton, Leo Moss, Archibald J. Marion Perkins, Horace Pippin, James A.

Porter, Patrick Reason, John Rhoden, Gregory Ridley, Jr. Scott, Charles Sebree, Henry Ossawa Tanner, William (Bill) Taylor, Alma Thomas, Dox Thrash, Laura Wheeler Waring, Edward Webster, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, Ed Wilson, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff.

Additional artists mentioned in the text: James Allen, Leslie Bolling, John Kane? , Jules Lion, James Vanderzee, many more.

Traveled to Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA; Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas, TX; and the Brooklyn Museum, NY. University of New Hampshire Art Gallery. Against the Grain: The Second Generation of Boston Expressionism. Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1999.

The 1985 publication is a summary compiled from the original 34 volumes of American Art Annual: Who's Who in Art, no new entries. It is in some ways an account of the spotty knowledge that the white art world had acquired about black artists during the decades after WWII.

The 1999 edition seems to have substantial additions. Included: Alonzo Aden, Frank Herman Alston, Jr.

Frederick Cornelius Alston, Dorothy Austin, Henry Avery, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Richmond Barthé, John Biggers, James Bland, Leslie Bolling, William E. Brooks, Elmer William Brown, Eugene J.

Brown, Samuel Joseph Brown, Selma Burke, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Taylor Goss Burroughs, Elmer Simms Campbell, John Carlis, Jr. Collins, Eldzier Cortor, Norma Criss, Allan Crite, Charles C. Dawson, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Arthur Diggs, Frank J. Dillon, Aaron Douglas, Charles Early, Walter W. Ellison, Annette Ensley, William M.

Farrow, Allan Freelon, Meta Fuller, Robert Gates, Rex Goreleigh, Donald O. Haines, John Wesley Hardrick, William A.

Harper, John Taylor Harris, Palmer Hayden, Dion Henderson, James V. Herring, Clifton Thompson Hill, Hector Hill, Raymond Howell, Bill Hutson, May Howard Jackson, Oliver Jackson, Wilmer Jennings, George H. Benjamin Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Joseph Kersey, Vivian Schuyler Key, Jacob Lawrence, Bertina B. Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Elba Lightfoot, Ed Loper, John Lutz, William McBride, Sr. Payne, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Nancy Prophet, Oliver Richard Reid, Earl Richardson, Marion Sampler, Augusta Savage, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Albert Alexander Smith, Teressa Staats, Thelma J. Tanner, Dox Thrash, Laura Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Benjamin L. Wigfall, Ellis Wilson, John W. Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Terrance Yancey. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1971.

Includes Elizabeth Catlett, John Wilson, Lois Mailou Jones, Charles White, Eldzier Cortor, Rex Goreleigh, Charlotte Amevor, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Roy DeCarava, Faith Ringgold, Earl Hooks, James E. Lewis, Benny Andrews, Norma Morgan, John Biggers and John Torres. Small 4to 8.4 x 5 in. Reflections from Within and Without: The Black Artist.

In: Harvard Art Review 3 (Winter 1968-69):10-16. One of the few timely articles on the Black Boston art scene. Mentions: Samuel Greene, Dana Chandler, Roger Beattie.

Roy Cato, Gary Rickson, Joseph Martin, Marcus Mitchell, and John Wilson. African-American Art: Selections from the Amon Carter Museums Collection. Charles Alston, Grafton Tyler Brown, Elizabeth Catlett, William H. Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, William E. Smith, Dox Thrash, Charles White, John Wilson, and others.

GATES, HENRY LOUIS and EVELYN BROOKS HIGGINBOTHAM, eds. Originally published in 8 volumes, the set has grown to 12 vollumes with the addition of 1000 new entries. Also available as online database of biographies, accessible only to paid subscribers well-endowed institutions and research libraries. As per update of February 2, 2009, the following artists were included in the 8-volume set, plus addenda.

A very poor showing for such an important reference work. Hopefully there are many more artists in the new entries: Jesse Aaron, Julien Abele (architect), John H. Ron Adams, Salimah Ali, James Latimer Allen, Charles H. Alston, Amalia Amaki, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, William E.

Artis, Herman "Kofi" Bailey, Walter T. Bailey (architect), James Presley Ball, Edward M. Bannister, Anthony Barboza, Ernie Barnes, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Cornelius Marion Battey, Romare Bearden, Phoebe Beasley, Arthur Bedou, Mary A. Bell, Cuesta Ray Benberry, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Howard Bingham, Alpha Blackburn, Robert H. Blackburn, Walter Scott Blackburn, Melvin R.

Bolden, David Bustill Bowser, Wallace Branch, Barbara Brandon, Grafton Tyler Brown, Richard Lonsdale Brown, Barbara Bullock, Selma Hortense Burke, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Taylor Goss Burroughs, John Bush, Elmer Simms Campbell, Elizabeth Catlett, David C. Raven Chanticleer, Ed Clark, Allen Eugene Cole, Robert H. Colescott, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest T. Crichlow, Michael Cummings, Dave the Potter [David Drake], Griffith J. Davis, Thomas Day, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Thornton Dial, Sr. Joseph Eldridge Dodd, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Sam Doyle, David Clyde Driskell, Robert S. Duncanson, Ed Dwight (listed as military, not as artist); Mel Edwards, Minnie Jones Evans, William McNight Farrow, Elton Fax, Daniel Freeman, Meta Warrick Fuller, Reginald Gammon, King Daniel Ganaway, the Goodridge Brothers, Rex Goreleigh, Tyree Guyton, James Hampton, Della Brown Taylor (Hardman), Edwin Augustus Harleston, Charles "Teenie" Harris, Lyle Ashton Harris, Bessie Harvey, Isaac Scott Hathaway, Palmer Hayden, Nestor Hernandez, George Joseph Herriman, Varnette Honeywood, Walter Hood, Richard L. Hunster, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Bill Hutson, Joshua Johnson, Sargent Claude Johnson, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Ann Keesee, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Samella Lewis, Glenn Ligon, Jules Lion, Edward Love, Estella Conwill Majozo, Ellen Littlejohn, Kerry James Marshall, Lynn Marshall-Linnemeier, Richard Mayhew, Carolyn Mazloomi, Aaron Vincent McGruder, Robert H. McNeill, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald H. Imagination (Gregory Warmack), Lorraine O'Grady, Jackie Ormes, Joe Overstreet, Carl Owens, Gordon Parks, Sr. Edgar Patience, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Margaret Smith Piper, Rose Piper, Horace Pippin, William Sidney Pittman, Stephanie Pogue, Prentiss Herman Polk (as Prentice), James Amos Porter, Harriet Powers, Elizabeth Prophet, Martin Puryear, Patrick Henry Reason, Michael Richards, Arthur Rose, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, Joyce J. Scott, Addison Scurlock, George Scurlock, Willie Brown Seals, Charles Sebree, Joe Selby, Lorna Simpson, Norma Merrick Sklarek, Clarissa Sligh, Albert Alexander Smith, Damballah Smith, Marvin and Morgan Smith, Maurice B. Sorrell, Simon Sparrow, Rozzell Sykes, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, J. Thomas, Robert Louis (Bob) Thompson, Mildred Jean Thompson, Dox Thrash, William Tolliver, Bill Traylor, Leo F. Twiggs, James Augustus Joseph Vanderzee, Kara Walker, William Onikwa Wallace, Laura Wheeler Waring, Augustus Washington, James W. Carrie Mae Weems, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John H. White, Jack Whitten, Carla Williams, Daniel S.

Williams, Paul Revere Williams (architect), Deborah Willis, Ed Wilson, Ellis Wilson, Fred Wilson, John Woodrow Wilson, Ernest C. Withers, Beulah Ecton Woodard, Hale Aspacio Woodruff. Art and Ethnics: Background for Teaching Youth in a Pluralistic Society. Includes: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, William Artis, Malcolm Bailey, Mike Bannarn, Edward M.

Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Selma Burke, George Washington Carver, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Dan R. Concholar, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Dale Brockman Davis, Beauford Delaney, James T. Diggs, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Robert S.

Farrow, Perry Ferguson, Elton Fax, Doyle Foreman, Meta Vaux Fuller, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Joseph W. Gilliard, Manuel Gomez, Rex Goreleigh, Ethel Guest, Edwin A Harleston, Palmer Hayden, Esther P.

Hill, Felrath Hines, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Richard, Hunt, Bob Jefferson, Joshua Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Cliff Joseph, Edward Judie, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Hughie Lee-Smith, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Earl B. Montgomery, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald J. Neal, John Outterbridge, Joe Overstreet, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Patrick Reason, Gary Rickson, Augusta Savage, Merton D. Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Neptune Thurston, Ruth Waddy, Laura Wheeler Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Rip Woods, Hartwell Yeargans.

The International Review of African American Art Vol. 4 (2004): Special Tribute to Charles Alston.

This issue includes What are the factors that contribute to outstanding success in visual art? What is the worth of the art?

Discussion by art historians Richard Powell and Nicole Gilpin Hood, curators Valerie Mercer and Jacqueline Serwer, collector Harriet Kelley, appraiser Michael Chisolm, art advisor Halima Taha, and gallery directors Eric Hanks, George NNamdi, Michael Rosenfeld and Sande Webster. This issue also includes: "Charles Alston - an appreciation" by Lemoine Pierce; "Rescuing Two Harlem Renaissance Artists: Malvin Gray Johnson and Allan Freelon" by Kenneth Rodgers; "Courting Art (NBA players who collect and the aesthetics of the game)" by Steve Prince; art news and reviews. Artists include: Charles Alston (17 works), William H. Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kerry James Marshall (4), Romare Bearden (3), Horace Pippin (2), Robert S.

Duncanson, Robert Colescott, Sam Gillian, Norman Lewis, Faith Ringgold, Richard Mayhew, Henry Tanner, Michael Massenburg, Edward Clark, Nanette Carter, Al Loving, Eric Mack, James Brantley, Beauford Delaney, Archibald J. Malvin Gary Johnson, Allan Freelon, Williams T. Williams, Elizabeth Catlett, Charles Sebree, Steve Prince, Chakaia Booker (3), Laylah Ali, Julie Mehretu, Terry Adkins, Nadine Robinson, Jean Shin, Hale Woodruff (2), Ben Jones, Lorraine Bolton, Marianetta Porter, Chandra Cox, Linda Bolton, John Biggers, John Wilson, Samella Lewis (2), Coco Fuso, Mark Blackshear, Herbert Gentry, Elisabeth Atnafu, John Vachon, and Barbara Norfleet.

Faithful Voices: Four Decades of African-American Art. Group exhibition of nine artists. Included: Claude Clark, Paul Keene, Reginald Gammon, James Brantley, Samella Lewis, Hughie Lee-Smith, Allan Rohan Crite, Calvin Burnett, and John Wilson. Feature review by Jeanne Zeidler, The International Review of African American Art Vol. Checklist of Afro-American Art and Artists. Kent State University Libraries, 1970. In: Serif 7 (December 1970):3-63. What could have been the solid foundation of future scholarship is unfortunately marred by errors of all kinds and the inclusion of numerous white artists. All Black artists are cross-referenced. African-Americans in Boston: More than 350 Years. Boston, Boston Public Library, 1991. Over 150 b&w photos and illus. Cover design by Larry Johnson.

27 visual artists listed include: Scipio Moorhead, Edward M. Bannister, Edmonia Lewis, Meta Warrick Fuller, Allan Rohan Crite, Ellen Banks, John Barbour, Roger (Richard) Beatty, Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Robin Chandler, Milton Derr, Paul Goodnight, James Guilford, Barbara Holt, Arnold Hurley, Larry Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Harriet Kennedy, J.

Marcus Mitchell, James Reed, Gary Rickson, Rudy Robinson, Henry Washington, John Wilson, Richard Yarde. HILDEBRANDT, LORRAINE and RICHARD S.

A Bibliography of Afro-American Print and Non-Print Resources in Libraries of Pierce County, Washington. Tacoma Community College Library, 1969.

Artists include: Charles Alston, William Artis, Henry Avery, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Carter Bazile, Romare Bearden, Rigaud Bénoit, Charles Bible, John Biggers, Wilson Bigaud, Eloise Bishop, Robert Blackburn, Ramos Blanco (Uruguayan), James Bland, Leslie Bolling, Seymour Bottex, Elmer Brown, Fred Brown, Samuel Brown, Selma Burke, Calvin Burnett, E. Simms Campbell, William Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase, Ernest Crichlow, Claude Clark, William Arthur Cooper, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, Harvey Cropper, Charles Dawson, Joseph Delaney, Richard Dempsey, Lillian A.

Dorsey, Aaron Douglas, Glanton Dowdell, Robert S. Duncanson, William Edmondson, William Farrow, Elton Fax, Fred Flemister, Allan Freelon, Meta Fuller, Rex Goreleigh [as Gorleigh], Bernard Goss, Eugene Grigsby, John Hardrick, Edwin Harleston, William Harper, Isaac Hathaway, Palmer Hayden, William Hayden, Vertis Hayes, Geoffrey Holder, Al Hollingsworth, Humbert Howard, Richard Hunt, May Jackson, Daniel Larue Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent C. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Henry B. Jones, Lois Jones, Ronald Joseph, Paul Keene, Joseph Kersey, Oliver LaGrone, Jacob Lawrence, Clarence Lawson, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Edward Loper, John C. Lutz, Geraldine McCullough, Charles McGee, Lloyd McNeil, William Majors, Sam Middleton, Ronald C.

Moody, Scipio Moorhead, Norma Morgan, Archibald Motley, Robert L. Oubré, Joe Overstreet, Pastor Argudin y Pedroso [as Argudin (Pastor) Pedrosa], Marion Perkins, Harper Phillips, Delilah Pierce, Horace Pippin, Robert Pious, James Porter, Elizabeth Prophet, Florence Purviance, John Robinson, Leo Robinson, Augusta Savage, William Edouard Scott, Georgette Seabrooke, Charles Sebree, Merton Simpson, William H. Simpson, Albert Alexander Smith, Marvin Smith, Thelma Johnson Streat, Henry O. Tanner, Bob Thompson, Dox Thrash [as Thrasher], Laura Waring, James Washington, James Wells [see also Lesesne Wells], Charles White, Jack Whitten, Walter Williams, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff.

AIMS Instructional Media Services, Inc. Black Dimensions in American Art (Film). Los Angeles: Carnation Company, 1971. Documentary film produced in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name. Nearly 50 artists included: John T. Biggers, Lois Mailou Jones, Ademola Olugebefola, Arthur Carraway, Dan Concholar, Delilah Pierce, Royce H. James Watkins, Charles White, Aaron Douglas, John Outterbridge, Arthur Rose, David Hammons, Charles Alexander Young, Jimmie Mosely, Jack Jordan, Mary Reed Daniel, James Parks, Calvin Bailey, Calvin Burnett, Garrett Whyte, Henri Linton, Vincent D.

Smith, John Riddle, William Pajaud, Barbara Jones [Jones-Hogu], Arthur Britt, Nancy Rowland, Jewell Simon, Juette Johnson Day, Lemuel M. Joyner, Richard Hunt, Eugenia Dunn, Alonzo Davis, Marion Epting, Marion Sampler, Wilbur Haynie [as Haney], Bernie Casey, Leo Twiggs, Phillip Hampton, John Wilson, Alma Thomas, Russell Gordon, David Driskell, Lucille Roberts [Malkia Roberts]. University Museum, Texas Southern University. Converging Voices, Transforming Dialogue: Selections from the Elliot and Kimberly Perry Collection. Included: Nina Chanel Abney, Mequitta Ahuja, Charles H.

Alston, Benny Andrews, Radcliffe Bailey, Ernie Barnes, John T. Biggers, Chakaia Booker, Michael Britto, iona brown, Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Ray Charles, Eldzier Cortor, Renee Cox, Ernest Crichlow, Beauford Delaney, Theaster Gates, Jr.

Deborah Grant, Luther Hampton, Lyle Ashton Harris, Palmer Hayden, Leslie Hewitt, Ann Johnson, Rashid Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Lauren Kelly, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Glenn Ligon, Whitfield Lovell, Kerry James Marshall, Richard Mayhew, Wardell Milan, II, Wangechi Mutu, Kermit Oliver, Robert A. Scott, Charles Sebree, Xaviera Simmons, Shinique Smith, Jeff Sonhouse, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Hank Willis Thomas, Mickalene Thomas, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, Charles White, Kehinde Wiley, John Wilson, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, and Brenna Youngblood. The ART Gallery Magazine Vol. Special Afro-American issue, 2nd Double number. Contains interviews with and statements by: John T.

Biggers, Bernie Casey, Alvin Hollingsworth, Alma Thomas, Thomas Sills, Also included: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ralph M. Artis, Malcolm Bailey, Edward M. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, John T. Biggers, Betty Blayton, Selma Burke, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, Avel DeKnight, Aaron Douglas, John E.

Duncanson, Eugene Eda, William Edmondson, Minnie Evans, James Gadson, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, James Herring, Felrath Hines, Richard Hunt, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Paul Keene, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Archibald J. Motley, Donald McIlvaine, Lloyd McNeill, Jr. Ademola Olugebefola, Joe Overstreet, Horace Pippin, Patrick Henry Reason, John W.

Simpson, Alvin Smith, John Stevens, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Russell Thompson, Eugene Warburg, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, John W. The ART Gallery Magazine: Afro-American issue Vol. Aden, Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Eric Anderson, Benny Andrews, William E. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Sheman Beck, Ed Bereal, John T. Biggers, Betty Blayton, Sylvester Britton, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, William S.

Carter, Bernie Casey, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Edward Christmas, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Emilio Cruz, Mary Reed Daniel, Charles C. Dawson, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Avel DeKnight, Richard Dempsey, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, David C. Duncanson, Eugene Eda, William Edmondson, Melvin Edwards, John Farrar, Frederick C. Flemister, Meta Warrick Fuller, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Robert Glover, Russell T. Gordon, Bernard Goss, Phillip Hampton, Marvin Harden, Romaine Harris, Eugene Hawkins, Palmer Hayden, Wilbur Haynie, Reginald Helm, James Herring, Leon Hicks, Vivian Hieber?

, Felrath Hines, Alvin Hollingsworth, Humbert Howard, Richard Hunt, A. Jackson, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Joshua Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Frederic Jones presumably Frederick D. , Lois Mailou Jones, Robert Edmond Jones, Jack Jordan, Sr. Louis Joseph Jordan, Ronald Joseph (as Joseph Ronald), Paul Keene, Joseph Kersey, Herman King, Sidney Kumalo, Jacob Lawrence, Clarence Lawson, Clifford Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, James Edward Lewis, Jr. Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Alvin Loving, William Majors, Howard Mallory, Jr.

David Mann, Richard Mayhew, Anna McCullough, Geraldine McCullough, Charles W. Earl Miller, Norma Morgan, Jimmie Mosely, Archibald J. Parks, Marion Perkins, Robert S. Pious, Horace Pippin, James A.

Porter, Judson Powell, Ramon Price, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, Noah Purifoy, Mavis Pusey, Robert D. Rhoden, Haywood "Bill" Rivers, Henry C. Rollins, Mahler Ryder, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Jewel Simon, Merton D. Simpson, Van Slater, Carroll Sockwell, John Stevens, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Ralph M. Tate, Lawrence Taylor, John Torres, Jr. Waddy, William Walker, Eugene Warburg, Howard N.

Watson, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Jack H. White, Jack Whitten, Garrett Whyte, Sam William, Douglas R.

Williams, Jose Williams, Todd Williams, Walter H. Williams, Stan Williamson, Ed Wilson, Ellis Wilson, John W. Wilson, Roger Wilson, Hale A. Woods, Roosevelt (Rip) Woods, Charles Yates, Hartwell Yeargans, et al. Civil Rights and the African American Artist: Have We Overcome?

In: Ijele: Art eJournal of the African World (2000). Includes: Ed Wilson, Joe Overstreet, Charles Searles, Houston Conwill, Estella Conwill Majozo, and Joseph DePace. Includes numerous biographical details not published elsewhere based on interviews with the artists. A volume of poetry illustrated with 27 paintings by Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Hughie Lee-Smith, John Wilson and the Thomas Eakins portrait of Henry Ossawa Tanner. The Harriet and Harmon Kelley Collection of African American Art: Works on Paper.

Traveling exhibition of 69 works on paper dating from the late1800s to 2002. Curated and text by Regenia Perry.

Included in the exhibition are drawings, etchings, lithographs, watercolors, pastels, acrylics, gouaches, linoleum and color screen prints by such noted artists as Ron Adams, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Bob Blackburn, Grafton Tyler Brown, Elmer Brown, Hilda Wilkerson Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Robert Colescott, Ernest Crichlow, Eldzier Cortor, Charles Criner, Mary Reed Daniel, Richard Dempsey, Aaron Douglas, William M. Farrow, Allan Freelon, Reginald Gammon, Rex Goreleigh, Margo Humphrey, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Paul Keene, Wifredo Lam, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Lionel Lofton, Bert Long, Whitfield Lovell, Sam Middleton, Dean Mitchell, Ike Morgan, William Pajaud, Alison Saar, Charles L. Smith, Raymond Steth, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Dox Thrash, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. Traveled to: College of Wooster Art Museum. Wooster, OH, August 28-October 28, 2007; Degenstein Art Gallery, Susquehanna University, Selinsgrove, PA, January 15-March 15, 2008; Vero Beach Museum of Art, Vero Beach, FL, July 1-October 15, 2008; Amon Carter Museum, Ft. Worth, TX, June 6-August 23, 2009; McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX, September 23, 2009-January 3, 2010; The Lowe Art Museum, Coral Gables, FL, November 13, 2010-January 16, 2011; Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, Lincoln, NE, May 27-September 25, 2011, and other venues. Las Cruces Museum of Fine Art & Culture. Looking Ahead: Portraits from the Mott-Warsh Collection. November 21, 2010-January 30, 2011. Curated by Camille Ann Brewer. Includes work by: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Chuck Close, Diane Edison, Chester Higgins, Jr. Whitfield Lovell, Allie McGhee, Hank Willis Thomas, Mildred Thompson, Charles White, Peter Williams, John Wilson, Richard Wyatt, Jr. Traveling exhibition: Muskegon Museum of Art, Muskegon, MI, August 21-October 28, 2008; Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi, February 11-May 8, 2011, and other venues. African American Art & Artists. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990. Many in color, substantial bibliog. A history of African American art from the seventeenth-century to the'90s. Revised and updated from Lewis's original publication Art: African American (1978). [See also entry on expanded edition, 2003].

Artists include: the slaves of Thomas Fleet, Boston. Scipio Moorhead, Neptune Thurston, G. Hobbs (white artist), Joshua Johnston, Julien Hudson, Robert M. Patrick Henry Reason, David Bustill Bowser, William Simpson, Robert S.

Duncanson, Eugene Warburg, Edward Mitchell Bannister, Grafton Tyler Brown, Nelson A. Primus, Charles Ethan Porter, (Mary) Edmonia Lewis, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Meta Vaux Warrick (Fuller), William Edouard Scott, Laura Wheeler Waring, Aaron Douglas, Hale Woodruff, Palmer Hayden, Archibald Motley, Jr.

Malvin Gray Johnson, Ellis Wilson, Sargent Claude Johnson, Augusta Savage, Richmond Barthé, William H. Johnson, James Lesesne Wells, Beauford Delaney, Selma Burke, Lois Mailou Jones, Alma Thomas, James A. Artis, William Edmondson, Horace Pippin, Clementine Hunter, David Butler, Charles Alston, Norman Lewis, Romare Bearden, Hughie Lee-Smith, Eldzier Cortor, Jacob Lawrence, Charles White, Elizabeth Catlett, John Wilson, John Biggers, Ademola Olugebefola, Herman Kofi Bailey, Raymond Saunders, Lucille Malkia Roberts, David Driskell, Floyd Coleman, Paul Keene, Arthur Carraway, Mikelle Fletcher, Varnette Honeywood, Phoebe Beasley, Benny Andrews, Reginald Gammon, Faith Ringgold, Cliff Joseph, David Bradford, Bertrand Phillips, Manuel Hughes, Phillip Lindsay Mason, Dana Chandler, Malaika Favorite, Bob Thompson, Emilio Cruz, Leslie Price, Irene Clark, Al Hollingsworth, William Pajaud, Richard Mayhew, Bernie Casey, Floyd Newsum, Frank Williams, Louis Delsarte, William Henderson, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Joe Overstreet, Adrienne W. Hoard, Sam Gilliam, Mahler Ryder, Oliver Jackson, Eugene Coles, Vincent Smith, Calvin Jones, Pheoris West, Noah Purifoy, Ed Bereal, Betye Saar, Ron Griffin, John Outterbridge, Marie Johnson, Ibibio Fundi, John Stevens, Juan Logan, John Riddle, Richard Hunt, Mel Edwards, Allie Anderson, Ed Love, Plla Mills, Doyle Foreman, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Artis Lane, John Scott, William Anderson, Martin Puryear, Thomas Miller, Fred Eversley, Larry Urbina, Ben Hazard, Sargent Johnson, Doyle Lane, Willis (Bing) Davis, Curtis Tucker, Yvonne Tucker, Bill Maxwell, Camille Billops, James Tatum, Douglas Phillips, Art Smith, Bob Jefferson, Evangeline Montgomery, Manuel Gomez, Joanna Lee, Allen Fannin, Leo Twiggs, James Tanner, Therman Statom, Marion Sampler, Arthur Monroe, James Lawrence, Marvin Harden, Raymond Lark, Murray DePillars, Donald Coles, Joseph Geran, Ron Adams, Kenneth Falana, Ruth Waddy, Van Slater, Joyce Wellman, William E.

Smith, Leon Hicks, Marion Epting, Russell Gordon, Stephanie Pogue, Devoice Berry, Margo Humphrey, Howard Smith, Jeff Donaldson, Lev Mills, Carol Ward, David Hammons, Michael Kelly Williams, Laurie Ourlicht, Gary Bibbs, Houston Conwill, Mildred Howard, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Alison Saar, Lorenzo Pace. Excellent survey of African American art as of the mid-70s, with a discriminating selection of plates. Unfortunately very poor quality reproductions. All 169 artists are cross-referenced, although not separately listed here.

Black Art: an international quarterly Vol. Articles include: African Influences On Black American Art by Floyd Coleman; Armando Solis by Mati Robinson; Collecting Black Art by Bob Holmes; Profile: Elizabeth Catlett 13 illus. 3 photos of artist, and 4 panel color fold-out; Profile: LaMonte Westmoreland; The Emerging Voice of the Black Visual Artists by Murray DePillars; Black American Music: the beginning by Bette Cox; Afro-Brazilian Art by Abdias do Nascimento (translation by Elizabeth Larkin); The Black Presence -- A Theatre of Creative Alternatives by Joan Sandler; African American Folk Tale. Artwork by: Sargent Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Aaron Douglas, Jacob Lawrence, Palmer Hayden, Richmond Barthé, Wadsworth Jarrell, Eldzier Cortor, Armando Solis, John Wilson, Elliot Pinkney, Elizabeth Catlett (including a four- page, color fold-out), Jose Heitor, Abdias do Nascimento, Sebastiao Januario. 17 color plates, numerous b&w illus. (by Yvonne Parks Catchings); Profile of Carmen McRae (by Jeanne King). Artwork by: Phillip Mason, Mildred Thompson, Sam Middleton, Robert Blackburn, Albert A. Smith, Charles White, John Wilson, Walter Williams, Dox Thrash, Samella Lewis, Elizabeth Catlett, Lev Mills, Leon Hicks, David Hammons, Dan Concholar, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Frank Smith, Ademola Olugebefola, Russell T. Gordon, Margo Humphrey, Phyllis Thompson, Ruth Waddy, Stanley Wilson, Jacob Lawrence, Reginald Gammon, Herman Bailey, Cleveland Bellow; photographs by Guille Roland of jazz singer Carmen McRae, and documentary photography. Negro Artists: Their Works Win Top U. 4 (July 22, 1946):62-65; color plate for each painter, b&w plates for sculptors. Important illustrated national coverage of African American artists, including: Marion Perkins ("Moses"), William Artis ("Draped Head"), Sargent Johnson ("Chester"), Richmond Barthé ("Head"), Eloise Bishop ("Head of a Boy"), Eldzier Cortor ("Southern Gate"), Jacob Lawrence ("Interior"), Horace Pippin ("John Brown Going to His Hanging"), Romare Bearden ("Factory Workers"), William H. Johnson ("Mount Calvary"), John Wilson ("Mother and Child") and Palmer Hayden ("Baptizing Day").

A to Zoo: Subject Access to Children's Picture Books. Index of illustrators includes: Jacqueline Ayer (4 books), Moneta Barnett (5), Charles Bible (1), Carole Byard (1), Leo Carty (1), Gylbert Coker (1), Don Crews (5), Ernest Crichlow (2), Leo Dillon and Diane Dillon (2), Stephanie Douglas (1), Tom Feelings (3), George Ford (1), Harper Johnson (1), Jerry Pinkney (3), Ray Prather (1), John Steptoe (6), Mozelle Thompson (1), Emmett Wigglesworth (1), and John Wilson (1). Obviously not a very complete reference; see vastly expanded 7th ed. Gallery 1, University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

Twentieth century African American art from the collection of Mr. Driskell; epilogue by Kevin Cole. Includes: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Bob Blackburn, Nanette Carter, William Carter, Kevin Cole, Robert Colescott, Allan R. Crite, Sam Gilliam, John Wesley Hardrick, Margo Humphrey, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Al Loving, William E.

Smith, Vincent Smith, Larry Walker, William T. African American Works on Paper from the Cochran Collection. Of 64 artists in this substantial collection.

By Richard Long; texts by Judith Wilson, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn. Includes 66 major 20th-century artists (including 16 women artists and a few less well-known artists): Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Trena Banks, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Betty Blayton, Moe Brooker, Vivian Browne, Beverly Buchanan, Selma Burke, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, John Dowell, Allan Edmunds, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Herbert Gentry, Sam Gilliam, Maren Hassinger, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, Wilmer Jennings, Lois Mailou Jones, Mohammad Khalil, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, James Little, Whitfield Lovell, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Norma Morgan, Frank Neal, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Joe Overstreet, Howardena Pindell, Stephanie Pogue, Richard Powell, Mavis Pusey, Faith Ringgold, Aminah Robinson, Betye Saar, Al Smith, Walter Agustus Simon, Morgan Smith, Marvin Smith, Vincent Smith, Luther Stovall, Alma Thomas, Mildred Thompson, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Hartwell Yeargans. 16+ venue touring exhibition beginning at: Lamar Dodd Art Center, LaGrange College, La Grange, GA, March 3-31, 1991; Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, SC; Lauren Rogers Museum, Laurel, MI; Hickory Museum of Art, Hickory, NC; Museum of the South, Mobile, AL; Museum of Arts and Sciences, Macon, GA; Greenville Museum of Art, Greenville, SC; Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History, Danville, VA; Gadsden Museum of Art, Gadsden, AL; Polk Museum of Art, Lakeland, FL; Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, SC; Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland, OH; York County Museum of Art, Rock Hill, SC; Pensacola Museum of Art, Pensacola, FL; Marietta-Cobb Museum of Art, Marietta, GA; Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN; Miami Univeristy Museum of Art, Oxford, OH; Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA; Jacksonville Museum of Art, Jacksonville, FL; William and Mary College, Williamsburg, VA; Northwest Visual Arts Center, Panama City, FL; Gertrude Herbert Institute, Augusta, GA; Springfield Art Museum, Springfield, MO; Beach Museum of Art, Manhattan, KS; Montgomery Museum of Art, Montgomery, AL; New Visions Gallery, Atlanta, GA. 4to 28 x 22 cm.

Group exhibition of newly acquired work. Includes: Bob Thompson Untitled (Tree Lift) 1962; Robert H. Colescott (A Stroll Through the Neighborhood, 1980, as well as the watercolor diptych study for the painting; John Wilson Standing Woman, 1980); John T. Riddle 9 assemblage in ammunition box pieces from the 1973 Spirit versus Technology Series; Martin Puryear (She, 1979 and Her, 1979); Doyle Lane 9 untitled Vases, early to mid 1960s; Howardena Pindell Festival, 1985; Frederick James Brown (After the Hunt, 1985); Ed Clark (Circular 2, 1987); Benny Andrews (Cherries, 1982); Romare Bearden (Mecklenburg Morning & Evening Sunrise, 1986, Prevalence of Ritual #1-5, 1974, In the Garden, 1979; Quilting Time, 1979); Marie E. Johnson Calloway (Hope Street, Church Mothers, 1984); Robert S.

Duncanson (Italianate Landscape, 1855); Herbert Gentry (Carnival, 1985); David Hammons The Door (Admissions Office), 1969, Skillets in the Closet, 1988; Noah Purifoy (The Sound of One Hand Clapping, 1988 shadow box assemblage, and Watts Riot, 1966); Betye Saar (Nine Mojo Secrets, 1971, Sambo's Banjo, 1971-2 and Floating Figure with Seven Spades, 1977); Carroll H. Simms (He's Got the Whole World in His Hands, 1984); Timothy Washington (Energy, 1970); John Outterbridge Lift Every Voice and California Crosswalk (both from Ethnic Heritage Series), 1984 and 1979 respectively; Herman Kofi Bailey, Jr. Bannister (10 landscape pencil drawings); Maren Hassinger (Leaning, 1971 and Interlock, 1984); Richmond Barthé (Mary McLeod Bethune, 1940s); Jacob Lawrence The Capture (Toussaint L'Ouverture series), 1987, Confrontation on the Bridge, 1975; Clementine Hunter (Pecan Pickers); and three paintings by Francois Turenne des Pres. California African American Museum (as Museum of Afro-American History and Culture). July 22, 1984-January 15, 1985.

28 artists included: Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud. Houston Conwill, Alonzo Davis, David Driskell, Mel Edwards, Frederick Eversley, Sam Gilliam, Maren Hassinger, Richard Hunt, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Marie Johnson-Calloway, Jacob Lawrence, Alvin Loving, Keith Morrison, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, John Outterbridge, Howardena Pindell, Martin Puryear, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Carroll Simms, Vincent Smith, James Tanner, William T. Forty Years: Robert Blackburn and the Printmaking Workshop, Inc.. Included: Bob Blackburn, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Nadine DeLawrence-Maine, Melvin Edwards, Herbert Gentry, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, Richard Mayhew, Richard Powell, Mavis Pusey, AJ Smith, Charles White, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde, et al. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2004. A study of Black social realism and its engagement with leftist political activism and civil rights struggles.

The murals of Charles White, graphics of John Wilson, poetry of Frank Marshall Davis, and novels of Willard Motley are used as centerpieces for a broader discussion of the concerns of social realism within each genre. Other artists mentioned include: Charles Alston, John T.

Biggers, Bob Blackburn, Elizabeth Catlett. Ernest Crichlow, Elton Fax, Oliver Harrington, Wilmer Jennings, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Archibald J. Smith, Raymond Steth, James Lesesne Wells, Hale Woodruff. 8vo 24 x 16 cm.

Association of Community-Based Artists of Westchester. Included: Emma Amos, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Adger Cowans, Krishna Reddy, John Wilson and others. The New York Public Library African American Desk Reference. Includes a short and dated list of the usual 110+ artists, with a considerable New York bias, and a random handful of Haitian artists, reflecting the collection at the Schomburg: architect Julian Francis Abele.

Bannister, Amiri Baraka, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Frank Bowling, Grafton Tyler Brown, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, David Butler, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Edward Clark, Robert Colescott, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, William Dawson, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, Robert S.

Duncanson, John Dunkley, William Edmondson, Melvin Edwards, Minnie Evans, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Sam Gilliam, Henry Gudgell, David Hammons, James Hampton, William A. Harper, Bessie Harvey, Isaac Hathaway, Albert Huie, Eugene Hyde, Jean-Baptiste Jean, Florian Jenkins, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Lois Mailou Jones, Lou Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Georges Liautaud, Seresier Louisjuste, Richard Mayhew, Jean Metellus, Oscar Micheaux, David Miller, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald J. Motley, Abdias do Nascimento, Philomé Obin, Joe Overstreet, Gordon Parks, David Philpot, Elijah Pierce, Howardena Pindell, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, David Pottinger, Harriet Powers, Martin Puryear, Gregory D. Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Sultan Rogers, Leon Rucker, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, William Edouard Scott, Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembene, Ntozake Shange, Philip Simmons, Lorna Simpson, Moneta J.

Smith, Micius Stéphane, Renée Stout, SUN RA, Alma Thomas, Neptune Thurston, Mose Tolliver (as Moses), Bill Traylor, Gerard Valcin, James Vanderzee, Melvin Van Peebles. Derek Walcott, Kara Walker, Eugene Warburg, Laura Wheeler Waring, James W. Washington, Barrington Watson, Carrie Mae Weems, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Lester Willis, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde. 8vo 9.1 x 7.5 in.

Images of Color 2008 - New York. An Exhibition in Celebration of Black History Month. Works from the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation's Art Collection. Included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Ramona Candy, Stephanie Chisholm, Eva Cockroft, Eldzier Cortor, Masha Froliak, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, D. Lammie-Hanson, Alex Harsley, William Howard, Richard Hunt, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Otto Neals, Ademola Olugebefola, Valerie Phillips, Gina Samson, Alfred J.

Smith, Vincent Smith, James VanDerZee, Charles White, Emmett Wigglesworth, John Wilson, and Wendy Wilson. And checklist of works exhibited. Co-curated by Romare Bearden and Carroll Greene, Jr.

Includes: 6 works of African heritage art and 54 artists: Joshua Johnson (as Johnston), Edward M. Bannister, Edmonia Lewis, Robert S. Duncanson, William Simpson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Meta Warrick Fuller, Aaron Douglas, Richmond Barthé, Palmer Hayden, Hale Woodruff, Archibald Motley, Augusta Savage, William E. Scott, Albert Smith, James A.

Porter, Allan Rohan Crite, Malvin Gray Johnson, William H. Richard Reid, Laura Waring, William E. Harleston, Lois Mailou Jones, Hughie Lee-Smith, Fred Flemister, John T. Biggers, Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden, Charles Alston, Charles White, John Wilson, Elizabeth Catlett, William Artis, William Edmondson (as Edmonson), Horace Pippin, Earle Richardson (as Earl), Claude Clark, Ernest Crichlow, Ellis Wilson, Robert Blackburn, Robert S. Pious, Norman Lewis, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Selma Burke, Eldzier Cortor, Ronald Joseph, Humbert Howard, Heywood Rivers, Richard Mayhew, Merton D.

Chicago: Johnson Publisnt Company Pub. Includes over 150 artists, more than double the number who were included in Ebony's Negro Handbook of 1966.

Nonetheless, this represents a very limited selection compared with the St. Louis Index (1972) and Cederholm (1973) which had been published in the two years immediately preceeding this revision.

Includes: Charles Alston, Eileen Anderson, Ralph Arnold, William E. Artis, Kwasi Asante, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Sherman Beck, Ben Bey, Michelle C.

Biggers, Gloria Bohanon, Lorraine Bolton, Shirley Bolton, Elmer Brown, Samuel J. Brown, Herbert Bruce, Joan Bryant, Selma Burke, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Nathaniel Bustion, William S. Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Benjamin Clark, Claude Clark, Irene V. Clark, Floyd Coleman, Eldzier Cortor, Samuel Countee, G.

Coxe, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Alonzo J. Brooks Dendy, Jeff Donaldson, Harold S. Dorsey, Aaron Douglas, Annette Ensley, Marion Epting, P.

Fernand (listed only in this publication), Frederick C. Flemister, Ausbra Ford, Leroy Foster, Meta Vaux Fuller, Rex Goreleigh, Joseph E. Hardrick, Oliver Harrington, Frank Hayden, Palmer Hayden, Vertis C. Hayes, Eselean Henderson, Alvin C.

Hollingsworth, Humbert Howard, Kenneth Howard (in this publication only), Richard Hughes, Richard Hunt, J. Jackson, Wilmer Jennings, Lester L. Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Ben Jones, Lawrence Jones, Lois Maillou Jones, Mark Jones, Charles Keck, James E. Kennedy, Joseph Kersey, Henri Umbaji King, Omar Lama, Jacob Lawrence, Clifford Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Leon Leonard, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Edward L. Loper, Anderson Macklin, William Majors, Stephen Mayo, Geraldine McCullough, Eva Hamlin Miller, Rosetta Dotson Minner, Corinne Mitchell, James Mitchell, Norma Morgan, Jimmie Mosely, Archibald J. Motley, Dindga McCannon, David Normand, Hayward Oubre, Sandra Peck, Marion Perkins, Alvin Phillips, Delilah Pierce, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Georgette Seabrooke Powell, Leo Twiggs, Al Tyler, Anna Tyler, Steve Walker, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Kenneth V.

Creative Space: Fifty Years of Robert Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop. November 27, 2002-January 29, 2003.

Programme and checklist, color illus. A Library of Congress exhibition realized in collaboration with International Print Center New York and the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts.

Prints drawn from the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop Archives and Collection, now on deposit at The Library of Congress. African American artists included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Diogenes Ballester, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Bob Blackburn, Roy DeCarava, Elizabeth Catlett, Ernest Crichlow, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Robin Holder, Margo Humphrey, Ronald Joseph, Mohammed Khalil, Jacob Lawrence, Rudzani Nemasetoni, Faith Ringgold, Juan Sanchez, Vincent Smith, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff.

Group exhibition of works on paper by 22 artists. Included: Toyce Anderson [hanging mobile entitled Snookie's Snack Shack Inn], Benny Andrews, Elizabeth Catlett, Sam Gilliam, Sandra Lerner, Norman Lewis, Chris Ofili, Howardena Pindell, Larry Potter, Debra Priestly, Robert Reid, Julio Valdez, John Wilson. Unbroken Circle: Exhibition of African American Artists of the 1930's and 1940's. Checklist of work by 56 artists (including 10 women artists). Corinne Jennings; text by David C.

Driskell, and beautiful memoir by curator / artist Vincent D. Well-chosen examples of each artist's work. Includes: Charles Alston, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Robert Blackburn, William Braxton, Selma Burke, Samuel J. Brown, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Richard Dempsey, Reba Dickerson-Hill, Aaron Douglas, Elton Fax, Charlotte White Franklin, Meta Fuller, Herbert Gentry, Rex Goreleigh, Palmer Hayden, Humbert L.

Howard, May Howard Jackson, Wilmer A. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Paul Keene, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, James Lewis, Norman Lewis, Joan Maynard, Archibald Motley, Delilah Pierce, Robert Pious, Georgette Powell, Daniel Pressley, Donald Reid, John Rhoden, Charles Sebree, Thomas Sills, Alma Thomas, Dox Thrash, Masood A.

Warren, James Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, Ed Wilson, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. Text includes discussion of some additional artists: Robert Duncanson, Edmonia Lewis, Henry Tanner, Valerie Maynard, James Porter. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.

7 color plates, checklist of 47 works, notes. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, January 15-July 6, 2003. The collection is discussed topically rather than in chronological order: Cultural Heritage, North, South, Religion, Labor, Recreation, War. Texts by Lisa Mintz Messinger, Lisa Gail Collins and Rachel Mustalish Printmaking Techniques of the WPA Printmakers.

Artists include: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Bob Blackburn, Elmer W. Brown, Samuel Joseph Brown, Calvin Burnett, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Joseph Delaney, Palmer Hayden, Carl G.

Jefferson, Wilmer Jennings, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Horace Pippin, David Ross, Charles Sallee, Albert A. Smith, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, Bill Traylor, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. 10.8 x 8.4 in. Strength in Numbers: Artists Respond to Conflict. Group exhibition of work from the 1930s-present by 24 artists protesting the use of U. Government authority against its own citizens. Included: Calvin Burnett, Elizabeth Catlett, Linga Diko, Reginald Gammon, Jacob Lawrence, Juan Logan, Lorenzo Pace, Moira Pernambuco, Howardena Pindell, Duhirwe Rushemeza, Clarissa Sligh, Vincent Smith, John Wilson.

14 Black Artists from Boston. November 30, 1969-January 11, 1970. Dele (Stanley Pinckney), Dana C.

Henry DeLeon, Sonny Hughes, Milton Derr (as Johnson), Jerry Pinkney, Gary Rickson, Leo Robinson, Al Smith, Richard Stroud, Lovett Thompson, John Wilson, Richard Yarde. List of artists from Negro Digest, January 1970:80.

This exhibition was an expanded version of the Rose Art Museum's "12 Black Artists from Boston" -- adding Sonny Hughes and Milton Johnson to the roster. October 7, 1979-January 6, 1980. Includes: Emma Amos, Casper Banjo, Cleveland Bellow, Bob Blackburn, Elmer Brown, Grafton Tyler Brown, Sam Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Carole Byard, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr. Dan Concholar, Alonzo Davis, John Dowell, Allan Edmunds, Marion Epting, Kenneth Falana, Russell Gordon, Raymond Grist, David Hammons, Leon Hicks, Raymond Holbert, Jacqui Holmes, Margo Humphrey, Wilmer Jennings, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Winston Kennedy, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Jules Lion, Percy Martin, Valerie Maynard, Lev Mills, Jay Moon, Scipio Moorhead, Norma Morgan, Nefertiti, Ademola Olugebefola, Patrick Reason, Joe Ross presumably Joseph B. , Betye Saar, Charles Sallee, A.

Smith, Frank Smith, George Smith, William Smith, Raymond Steth, Lou Stovall, Sharon Sutton, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Mildred Thompson; Phyllis Thompson, Dox Thrash, Ruth Waddy, Bobby Walls, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Walter H. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Stephanie Pogue, Calvin Reid. Traveled to: Gallery of Art, Howard University, Washington, DC, February 10-March 28, 1980. Black Print Masters: Past and Present. Group exhibition of 15 artists including: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Robert Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Hayward Oubré, Wilmer Jennings, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Ann Tanksley, John Wilson and Hale Woodruff.

University Museum, University of Delaware. A Century of African American Art: The Paul R. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2004. Mostly color plates throughout, artists' biogs. By Amalia Amaki, curator of the collection, with additional texts by Sharon Pruitt, Ann E.

Gibson, Ikem Stanley Okoye, Marcia R. Cohen and Diana McClintock, Carla Williams, Winston Kennedy.

Artists include: Jim Alexander, William J. Anderson, Benny Andrews, Heman Kofi Bailey, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Frank Bowling, Benjamin Britt, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, Doughba H. Caranda-Martin, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, David Driskell, Michael Ellison, John W. Feagin, Reginald Gammon, Samuel Guilford, Earl J. Hooks, Margo Humphrey, Bill Hutson, Amos "Ashanti" Johnson, P.

Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Samella Lewis, James Little, Lionel Lofton, Edward Loper, Aimee Miller, Jimmie Lee Mosely, Ming Smith Murray, Ayokunle Odeleye, Harper T. Phillips, Howardena Pindell, Prentice H. Polk, Alvin Smith, Cedric Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Leo Twiggs, James Vanderzee, Carrie Mae Weems, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, et al. Traveled to numerous venues including: Spelman College Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA, September 8-December 10, 2005; Hilliard University Art Museum, Lafayette, LA, September 7-December 29, 2007. Alone in a Crowd: Prints of the 1930s-40s by African-American Artists. Collection Reba and Dave Williams. December 10, 1992-February 28, 1993. Checklist of 105 prints with biogs. Of all artists by Diane Cochrane, index. Excellent texts by Dougherty, Lowery S. Sims, Leslie King Hammond on Black Printmakers and the W. And Reba and Dave Williams. Includes: Charles Alston, John Biggers, Robert Blackburn, Elmer W.

Hilda Wilkinson Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, Charles C. Dawson, Aaron Douglas, Carl Hill, Louise Jefferson, Wilmer Jennings, William H.

Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Henry Bozeman Jones, Lawrence Arthur Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Ronald Joseph, Hughie Lee-Smith, James E. Lewis, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Richard W. Lindsey, William McBride, Hayward Oubré, Georgette Seabrooke Powell, David Ross, Charles Sallee, William E.

Smith, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Clarence Williams, Hale Woodruff, John Wilson. Traveled to 17 other locations.

Oblong 4to 23 x 28 cm. Catalogue listing 115 works by 59 artists (only 10 women artists included), 58 b&w illus.

Plus b&w cover design by Dmitri Wright; addresses for approx. Miller; poem by Paul Waters. Important record of one of the major African American exhibitions of the early 1970s. Includes: Charles Axt, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Betty Blayton, Samuel Brown, Ernest Crichlow, Norma Criss, Allan Rohan Crite, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, William Edmondson, Barbara Fudge, John Fudge, James Green, Palmer Hayden, Eddie Holmes, Raymond Hunt, Bill Hutson, Zell Ingram, Gerald Jackson, Bob James, Florian Jenkins, Wilmer Jennings, Ben Johnson, Jeanne Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Ben Jones, Leon Jones, Robert Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Edward Loper, Frank Marshall, Marietta (Betty) Mayes, Gordon Mayes, Richard Mayhew, Don Miller, Julia Miller, Joe Overstreet, Horace Pippin, Rev. Arthur Roach, Junius Redwood, Robert Reid, Haywood Bill Rivers, Bernard Séjourne, Christopher Shelton, Margaret Slade (Kelley), George Smith, Vincent Smith, Thelma Johnson Streat, Dox Thrash, Paul Waters, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, and Dmitiri Wright. Smith College Museum of Art. A Head of A Negro Youth. In: Smith College Museum of Art Bulletin, October, 1943 27 pp. The article describes the spring exhibition "Paintings, Sculpture by American Negro Artists, " noting the high caliber of the works displayed. Paintings, Sculpture by American Negro Artists. Exhibition checklist with a historically important 2 pp. War-time introduction by James A. Included: Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Malvin Gray Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Romeyn Van Vleck Lippmann, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John Wilson, et al. Traveled to: Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston.

4to 9 x 6 in. Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College. September 1, 2005-June 4, 2006. Richmond Barthé, Willie Cole, Horace Pippin, Carrie Mae Weems, John Wilson. Includes: Elton Fax, "Puissance inouie du peintre et du sculpteur":268-74.

Includes: Charles Alston, Edward M. Biggers, Selma Burke, Elizabeth Catlett, Ernest Crichlow, Robert S. Duncanson, Joshua Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Horace Pippin, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. An Exuberant Bounty: Prints and Drawings by African Americans. Group exhibition consisting of a chronological survey of 70 pieces from the Museum's holdings of over 200 works on paper by 20th-century African American artists. Curated by Innis Howe Shoemaker. Included: Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Sam Brown, Charles Burwell, Elizabeth Catlett, Willie Cole, John Dowell, Reginald Gammon, Humbert Howard, Margo Humphrey, Paul Keene, Juan Logan, Al Loving, Quentin Morns, Keith Morrison, Howardena Pindell, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Charles Searles, Lorna Simpson, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, Ellen Powell Tiberino.

Represent: 200 Years of African American Art. Powell, thematic essays by Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw.

Highlights over 150 objects in the museum's collection, whereas the exhibition packed into an overly small room included only 75 works by a meager 50 artists, including: Moses Williams, Dawoud Bey, Moe Brooker, Samuel J. Brown, Donald Camp, Elizabeth Catlett, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, Jr. David Drake (Dave the Potter), Sam Gilliam, Barkley L. Hendricks, Peter Hill, William H.

Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Glenn Ligon, Odili Donald Odita, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Gordon Parks, Jerry Pinkney, Horace Pippin, Martin Puryear, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Joyce J. Scott, Lorna Simpson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, Dox Thrash, Bill Traylor, James Vanderzee, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, and John Wilson. [Review: Philip Kennicott, The Washington Post, January 14, 2015;] 4to 12.2 x 9.8 in. In Search of Missing Masters: The Lewis Tanner Moore Collection of African American Art. September 28, 2008-February 22, 2009.

133 color plates (most full-page) and several b&w illus. Checklist of 135 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by 92 artists. Texts by Lewis Tanner Moore, Curlee Raven Holton, Margaret Rose Vendryes; brief biogs. Includes: Henry Ossawa Tanner, Amelia Amaki, Emma Amos, James Atkins, Edward M.

Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Cleveland Bellow, Bob Blackburn, Berrisford Boothe, James Brantley, Benjamin Britt, Moe Brooker, Samuel Joseph Brown, Barbara Bullock, Selma urke, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Charles Burwell, Donald Camp, James Camp, William S. Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Claude Clark, Irene V. Clark, Nanette Clark, Kevin Cole, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Roy Crosse, Joseph Delaney, Marita Dingus, David C. Driskell, James Dupree, Walter Edmonds, Allan Edmunds, James Edwards, Melvin Edwards, Allan Freelon, Reginald Gammon, Herbert Gentry, Sam Gilliam, Rex Goreleigh, Barkley Hendricks, Curley Holton, Humbert Howard, Edward Ellis Hughes, Bill Hutson, Leroy Johnson, Martina Joshnson-Allen, Lois Mailou Jones, Ron H. Jones, Paul Keene, Glenn F.

Kellum, Columbus Knox, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Ed Loper, Al Loving, Deryl Daniel Mackie, Ulysses Marshall, Richard Mayhew, John McDaniel, Thaddeus G. Mosley, Frank Neal, George Neal, Hayward Oubre, Carlton Parker, Janet Taylor Pickett, Howardena Pindell, Charles Pridgen, Faith Ringgold, Leo Robinson, Qaaim Salik, Raymond Saunders, Charles Searles, Charles Sebree, Sterling Shaw, Louis Sloan, Raymond Steth, Phil Sumpter, Dox Thrash, Ellen Powell Tiberino, Andrew Turner, Howard Watson, Richard Watson, James Lesesne Wells, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, and Hale Woodruff. Southeast Arkansas Arts and Science Center. Selections from the John M.

Howard Memorial Collection of African-American Art. Includes unknown Africobra [as AfraCobra] artist, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Bernard W. Brooks III, Vivian Browne, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Arthur Coppedge, Tarrance Corbin, Eldzier Cortor, J. Brooks Dendy III, Palmer Hayden, Leon N. Hicks, Manuel Hughes [as Manual], Rosalind Jeffries, Jacob Lawrence, Samella Lewis, Juan Logan, John Nichols, James D.

Parks, Vincent Smith, Nelson Stevens, John Wilson, Henry Wolf, Rip Woods. AFRO USA: A Reference Wok on the Black Experience.

Of art and visual artists, bibliog. Massive encyclopedic reference work with small section pp. 702-723 devoted to visual art. Includes entries on Charles Alston, Robert Bannister, Richmond Barthe, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, William Carter, Dana Chandler, Ernest Crichlow, Aaron Douglas, Robert Duncanson, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Alice Gafford, Sam Gilliam, Rose Green, David Hammons, William Harper, Isaac Hathaway, Hector Hill, Richard Hunt, May Howard Jackson, Jack Jordan, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Geraldine McCullough, Earl Miller, P'lla Mills, Joseph Overstreet, Horace Pippin, Augusta Savage, Vincent Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Bob Thompson, Laura Wheeler Waring, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Beulah Woodard, and Hale Woodruff. The list of "Other Noted Negro Painters and Sculptors" includes: Benny Andrews, William E.

Bannarn, Eloise Bishop, Betty Blayton, Selma H. Simms Campbell, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Charles C. Dawson, Avel DeKnight, Joseph Delaney, William McKnight Farrow, Fred C. Freelon, Reginald Gammon, William Giles?

, Rex Gorleigh, Stephen Greene white artist? Harleston, Palmer Hayden, Felrath Hines, Al Hollingsworth, Sargent C. Johnson, Ben Jones, Henry B. Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Larry Lewis, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Edward L.

Loper, Leon Meeks, Archibald Motley, Marion Perkins, James A. Porter, Elizabeth Prophet, William Edouard Scott, Charles Sebree, Thelma Johnson Streat, James L. Wells, Jack White and John Wilson.

Scipio Moorhead and Malcolm Bailey mentioned in passing. The Negro Almanac: A Reference Work on the Afro-American.

New York: A Wiley-Interscience Publication, 1983. Includes essay on The Black Artist. Gylbert Coker cited as art consultant. Artists mentioned include: Scipio Moorhead, James Porter, Eugene Warburg, Robert Duncanson, William H.

Bannister, Joshua Johnston, Robert Douglass, David Bowser, Edmonia Lewis, Henry O. Tanner, William Harper, Dorothy Fannin, Meta Fuller, Archibald Motley, Palmer Hayden. Malvin Gray Johnson, Laura Waring, William E. Scott, Hughie Lee-Smith, Zell Ingram, Charles Sallee, Elmer Brown, William E. Smith, George Hulsinger, James Herring, Aaron Douglas, Augusta Savage, Charles Alston, Hale Woodruff, Charles White, Richmond Barthé, Malvin Gray Johnson, Henry Bannarn, Florence Purviance, Dox Thrash, Robert Blackburn, James Denmark, Dindga McCannon, Frank Wimberly, Ann Tanksley, Don Robertson, Lloyd Toones, Lois Jones, Jo Butler, Robert Threadgill, Faith Ringgold, Romare Bearden, Ernest Crichlow, Norman Lewis, Jimmy Mosley, Samella Lewis, F.

Spellmon, Phillip Hampton, Venola Seals Jennings, Juanita Moulon, Eugene Jesse Brown, Hayward Oubré, Ademola Olugebefola, Otto Neals, Kay Brown, Jean Taylor, Genesis II, David Hammons, Senga Nengudi, Randy Williams, Howardena Pindell, Edward Spriggs, Beauford Delaney, James Vanderzee, Melvin Edwards, Vincent Smith, Alonzo Davis, Dale Davis, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Gordon Parks, Rex Goreleigh, William McBride, Jr. Eldzier Cortor, James Gittens, Joan Maynard. Kynaston McShine, Coker, Cheryl McClenney, Faith Weaver, Randy Williams, Florence Hardney, Dolores Wright, Cathy Chance, Lowery Sims, Richard Hunt, Roland Ayers, Frank Bowling, Marvin Brown, Walter Cade, Catti, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Manuel Hughes, Barkley Hendricks, Juan Logan, Alvin Loving, Tom Lloyd, Lloyd McNeill, Algernon Miller, Norma Morgan, Mavis Pusey, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Thomas Sills, Thelma Johnson Streat, Alma Thomas, John Torres, Todd Williams, Mahler Ryder, Minnie Evans, Jacob Lawrence, Haywood Rivers, Edward Clark, Camille Billops, Joe Overstreet, Louise Parks, Herbert Gentry, William Edmondson, James Parks, Marion Perkins, Bernard Goss, Reginald Gammon, Emma Amos, Charles Alston, Richard Mayhew, Al Hollingsworth, Calvin Douglass, Merton Simpson, Earl Miller, Felrath Hines, Perry Ferguson, William Majors, James Yeargans.

Ruth Waddy; Evangeline Montgomery, Jeff Donaldson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Gerald Williams, Carolyn Lawrence, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Frank Smith, Howard Mallory, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Nelson Stevens, Vivian Browne, Kay Brown, William Harper, Isaac Hathaway, Julien Hudson, May Howard Jackson, Edmonia Lewis, Patrick Reason, William Simpson, A. Wilson, William Braxton, Allan Crite, Alice Gafford, Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, William Artis, John Biggers, William Carter, Joseph Delaney, Elton Fax, Frederick Flemister, Ronald Joseph, Horace Pippin, Charles Sebree, Bill Traylor, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Starmanda Bullock, Dana Chandler, Raven Chanticleer, Roy DeCarava, John Dowell, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, Daniel Johnson, Geraldine McCullough, Earl Miller, Clarence Morgan, Norma Morgan, Skunder Boghossian, Bob Thompson, Clifton Webb, Jack Whitten. Cutting a Figure: Fashioning Black Portraiture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008. (43 in color), notes, bibliog.

Substantial chapter devoted to Barkley L. Hendricks; discussion of the self-portrait photographs of Lyle Ashton Harris and Renée Cox; extensive discussion of African American fashion model Donyale Luna, and brief mention of nearly 70 other African and African American artists. 8vo 25 x 23 cm.

Between Image and Concept: Recent Acquisitions in African American Art. November 12, 2005-February 6, 2006. Artists included: Emma Amos, Sanford Biggers, iona rozeal brown, Elizabeth Catlett, Thornton Dial, Sr. Leonardo Drew, Ellen Gallagher, Cavin Jones, Glenn Ligon, Gordon Parks, Martin Puryear, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Gelsey Verna, Kara Walker, Charles White, William Earle Williams, John Wilson.

Included: Ramon Menocal, John Wilson. James Guide to Black Artists. A highly selective reference work listing only approximately 400 artists of African descent worldwide including around 300 African American artists, approximately 20% women artists. Of work or photos of many artists, brief descriptive texts by well-known scholars, with selected list of exhibitions for each, plus many artists' statements.

A noticeable absence of many artists under 45, most photographers, and many women artists. Far fewer artists listed here than in Igoe, Cederholm, or other sources. An Index to Artists' Writings, Statements, and Interviews.

Useful reference work; includes numerous African American artists: Ron Adams, Charles Alston, Charlotte Amevor, Benny Andrews, Dorothy Atkins, Casper Banjo, Ellen Banks, Romare Bearden, Ed Bereal, Arthur Berry, John Biggers, Betty Blayton, Gloria Bohanon, Shirley Bolton, David Bradford, Arthur Britt, Frederick Brown, Kay Brown, Winifred Brown, Vivian Browne, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Cecil Burton, Sheryle Butler, Carole Byard, Arthur Carraway, Bernie Casey, Yvonne Catchings, Mitchell Caton, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Claude Clark Jr. Irene Clark, Donald Coles, Robert Colescott, Dan Concholar, Eldzier Cortor, Marva Cremer, Doris Crudup, Dewey Crumpler, Emilio Cruz, Samuel Curtis, William Curtis, Alonzo Davis, Bing Davis, Dale Davis, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Brooks Dendy, Murry DePillars, Robert D'Hue, Kenneth Dickerson, Leo Dillon, Aaron Douglas, Emory Douglas, David Driskell, Eugenia Dunn, Annette Ensley, Eugene Eda, Melvin Edwards, Marion Epting, Minnie Evans, Frederick Eversley, Tom Feelings, Mikele Fletcher, Moses O. Fowowe, Miriam Francis, Ibibio Fundi, Alice Gafford, West Gale, Joseph Geran, Sam Gilliam, Robert Glover, Wilhelmina Godfrey, Rex Goreleigh, Robert H. Greene, Ron Griffin, Eugene Grigsby. Horathel Hall, Wes Hall, David Hammons, Philip Hampton, Marvin Harden, John T.

Harris, William Harris, Kitty Hayden, Ben Hazard, Napoleon Jones-Henderson (as Henderson), William H. Henderson, Ernest Herbert, Leon Hicks, Candace Hill-Montgomery, Alfred Hinton, Al Hollingswoth, Earl Hooks, Raymond Howell, Margo Humphrey, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Suzanne Jackson, Walter Jackson, Rosalind Jeffries, Marie Johnson, Ben Jones, Laura Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Jack Jordan, Cliff Joseph, Gwendolyn Knight, Larry Compton Kolawole, Raymond Lark, Jacob Lawrence, Flora Lewis, James E.

Lewis, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Juan Logan, Willie Longshore, Ed Love, Al Loving, Philip Mason, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Karl McIntosh, William McNeil, Yvonne Meo, Sam Middleton, Onnie Millar, Eva H. Miller, Sylvia Miller, Lev Mills, James Mitchell, Arthur Monroe, Evangeline Montgomery, Ron Moore, Norma Morgan, Jimmie Mosely, Otto Neals, Trudell Obey, Kermit Oliver, Haywood Oubré, John Outterbridge, Lorenzo Pace, William Pajaud, Denise Palm, James Parks, Angela Perkins, Howardena Pindell, Elliott Pinkney, Adrian Piper, Horace Pippin, Leslie Price, Noah Purifoy, Martin Puryear, Roscoe Reddix, Jerry Reed, Robert G. Reid, William Reid, John Rhoden, Gary Rickson, John Riddle, Faith Ringgold, Haywood Rivers, Lethia Robertson, Brenda Rogers, Charles D. Rogers, Bernard Rollins, Arthur Rose, John Russell, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Charles Shelton, Thomas Sills, Jewel Simon, Merton Simpson, Van Slater, Alfred James Smith, Arenzo Smith, Arthur Smith, Damballah Smith, George Smith, Howard Smith. Greg Sparks, Sharon Spencer, Nelson Stevens, James Tanner, Della Taylor, Rod Taylor, Evelyn Terry, Alma Thomas, James "Son Ford" Thomas, Bob Thompson.

John Torres, Elaine Towns, Curtis Tucker, Yvonne Tucker, Charlene Tull, Leo Twiggs, Alfred Tyler, Anna Tyler, Bernard Upshur, Florestee Vance, Royce Vaughn, Ruth Waddy, Larry Walker, William Walker, Bobby Walls, Carole Ward, Pecolia Warner, Mary Washington, James Watkins, Roland Welton, Amos White, Charles White, Tim Whiten, Acquaetta Williams, Chester Williams, Daniel Williams, Laura Williams, William T. Williams, Luster Willis, Fred Wilson, John Wilson, Stanley Wilson, Bernard Wright, Richard Wyatt, Bernard Young, Charles Young, Milton Young. Prints by American Negro Artists. In color and b&w, beautifully printed on recto only.

Foreword by Rosemarie Von Studnitz; texts by James A. Pictorial endpapers and title page illus. The 51 artists in the first edition included: Emma Amos, Ralph Arnold, Brumsic Brandon, Jr. Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Joyce Cadoo, Mel Carey, Yvonne Carter, Eugene Cheltenham, Floyd Coleman, Wm.

Lawrence Compton, Eugenia Dunn, Charles Ferguson, Robert Glover, Hugh Harrell, Scotland Harris, Eugene Hawkins, Leroy Henderson, Leon Hicks, Alvin Hollingsworth, Richard Hunt, Wilmer James, Jack Jordan, Richard Kinney, Anderson Macklin, Geraldine McCullough, James McNeil, William McNeil, Yvonne Meo, Norma Morgan, Jimmie Lee Mosely, Alvin Pope, Mavis Pusey, Don Pyburn, John Riddle, Charles D. Rogers, Betye Saar, Ernest Satchell, Jewel W. Simon, Van Slater, Frank E. Smith, Sylvia Snowden, Laura Soares, Ruth G. Waddy, James Lesesne Wells, Fred R.

Wilson, John Wilson, William T. Williams, Charles Yates, and Heartwell Yeargans.

NOTE: The second expanded edition of 1967 contained 60 artists, adding images by: John T. Biggers, Sylvester Britton, David C.

Driskell, Marion Epting, Milton Derr (as Johnson), Michael K. Phillips, Sue Smock and David F. , cloth, printed green and white paper labels on spine and front cover, d. San Antonio Museum of Art. The Harmon and Harriet Kelley Collection of African American Art. 23 color plates, checklist of 124 works, bibliog. Essays by Gylbert Coker and Corinne Jennings. Artists in the exhibition: Charles Alston, Benny Andrews, John W.

Banks, Edward Bannister, Basquiat, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Grafton Tyler Brown, Samuel J. Brown, William Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr. John Coleman, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, Mary R. Daniel, Alonzo Davis, Joseph Delaney, Thornton Dial, Aaron Douglas, Robert S. Duncanson, Minnie Evans, William Farrow, Rex Goreleigh, John W.

Harper, Palmer Hayden, Clementine Hunter, J. Johnson, Frank Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Lionel Lofton, Edward L.

Loper, Ulysses Marshall, Sam Middleton, Sister Gertrude Morgan, Ike Morgan, Emma Lee Moss, Archibald Motley, Marion Perkins, Charles Ethan Porter, Patrick Reason, Charles Sallee, Raymond Saunders, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, William E. Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Dox Thrash, William Tolliver, Bill Traylor, James Vanderzee, Laura Wheeler Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, and Joseph Yoakum. Traveled to: El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, TX; Michael C.

Carlos Museum, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH; Hunter Museum of Art, Chattanooga, TN. SAN FRANCISCO CA and NEW YORK (NY). Co-curated by Karen Jenkins-Johnson and Lisa Henry. Included: John Bankston, Romare Bearden, Sheila Pree Bright, Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Colescott, Gerald Cyrus, Kira Lynn Harris, Deborah Jack, Jacob Lawrence, Sonya Lawyer, Glenn Ligon, Felicia Megginson, Gordon Parks, Lorna Simpson, Hank Willis Thomas, James VanDerZee, Carrie Mae Weems, Carla Williams & Deirdre Visser, Philemona Williamson, John Wilson, Lauren Woods. Cold War Exiles in Mexico: U.

Dissidents and the Culture of Critical Resistance. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008. See, in particular, Chapter 2: The Politics of Fo.

Rm: African American Artists and the Making of Transnational Aesthetics. Includes: major coverage of Elizabeth Catlett, Francisco Mora, Charles White, John Wilson, and, to a lesser extent, Margaret Burroughs at the Taller de Grafica Popular; some description of Bob Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop, NY, and their collective art projects "Yes, the People" (1948) and Negro U.

(1949); brief mention of Romare Bearden, Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias, John Biggers and Jacob Lawrence. 8vo 9.1 x 6 in.

In Black and White: Afro-Americans in Print. Kalamazoo: Kalamazoo Public Library, 1980.

Adams, Ron Adams, Alonzo Aden, Muhammad Ali, Baba Alabi Alinya, Charles Alston, Charlotte Amevor, Benny Andrews, Ralph Arnold, William Artis, Ellsworth Ausby, Jacqueline Ayer, Calvin Bailey, Jene Ballentine, Casper Banjo, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Dutreuil Barjon, Ernie Barnes, Carolyn Plaskett Barrow, Richmond Barthé, Beatrice Bassette, Ad Bates, Romare Bearden, Phoebe Beasley, Roberta Bell, Cleveland Bellow, Ed Bereal, Arthur Berry, DeVoice Berry, Cynthia Bethune, Charles Bible, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Irving Blaney, Bessie Blount, Gloria Bohanon, Leslie Bolling, Shirley Bolton, Charles Bonner, Michael Borders, John Borican, Earl Bostic, Augustus Bowen, David Bowser, David Bradford, Edward Brandford, Brumsic Brandon, William Braxton, Arthur Britt Sr. Benjamin Britt, Sylvester Britton, Elmer Brown, Fred Brown, Kay Brown, Margery Brown, Richard L. Brown, Samuel Brown, Vivian E. Browne, Henry Brownlee, Linda Bryant, Starmanda Bullock, Juana Burke, Selma Burke, Eugene Burkes, Viola Burley, Calvin Burnett, John Burr, Margaret Burroughs, Nathaniel Bustion, Sheryle Butler, Elmer Simms Campbell, Thomas Cannon, Nick Canyon, Edward Carr, Art Carraway, Ted Carroll, Joseph S.

Carter, William Carter, Catti, George Washington Carver, Yvonne Catchings, Elizabeth Catlett, Mitchell Caton, Dana Chandler, Kitty Chavis, George Clack, Claude Clark, Ed Clark, J. Henrik Clarke, Leroy Clarke, Ladybird Cleveland, Floyd Coleman, Donald Coles, Margaret Collins, Paul Collins, Sam Collins, Dan Concholar, Arthur Coppedge, Wallace X. Conway, Leonard Cooper, William A. Cooper, Art Coppedge, Eldzier Cortor, Samuel Countee, Harold Cousins, William Craft, Cleo Crawford, Marva Cremer, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, Jerrolyn Crooks, Harvey Cropper, Doris Crudup, Robert Crump, Dewey Crumpler, Frank E.

Cummings, William Curtis, Mary Reed Daniel, Alonzo Davis, Charles Davis, Willis "Bing" Davis, Dale Davis, Charles C. Dawson, Juette Day, Thomas Day, Roy DeCarava, Paul DeCroom, Avel DeKnight, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Richard Dempsey, Murry DePillars, Robert D'Hue, Kenneth Dickerson, Leo Dillon, Raymond Dobard, Vernon Dobard, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Emory Douglas, Robert Douglass, Glanton Dowdell, David Driskell, Yolande Du Bois, Robert Duncanson, Eugenia Dunn, John Dunn, Adolphus Ealey, Eugene Eda, Melvin Edwards, Gaye Elliington, Annette Ensley, Marion Epting, Minnie Evans, Frederick Eversley, James Fairfax, Kenneth Falana, Allen Fannin, John Farrar, William Farrow, Elton Fax, Muriel Feelings, Tom Feelings, Frederick Flemister, Mikelle Fletcher, Curt Flood, Thomas Floyd, Doyle Foreman, Mozelle Forte (costume and fabric designer), Amos Fortune, Mrs.

Foster, Inez Fourcard (as Fourchard), John Francis, Miriam Francis, Allan Freelon, Meta Warrick Fuller, Stephany Fuller, Gale Fulton-Ross, Ibibio Fundi, Alice Gafford, Otis Galbreath, West Gale, Reginald Gammon, Jim Gary, Herbert Gentry, Joseph Geran, Jimmy Gibbez, Sam Gilliam, Robert Glover, Manuel Gomez, Russell Gordon, Rex Goreleigh, Bernard Goss, Samuel Green, William Green, Donald Greene, Joseph Grey, Ron Griffin, Eugene Grigsby, Henry Gudgell, Charles Haines, Clifford Hall, Horathel Hall, Wesley Hall, David Hammons, James Hampton, Phillip Hampton, Lorraine Hansberry, Marvin Harden, Arthur Hardie, Inge Hardison, John Hardrick, Edwin Harleston, William A. Harper, Gilbert Harris, John Harris, Maren Hassinger, Isaac Hathaway, Frank Hayden, Kitty Hayden, Palmer Hayden, Vertis Hayes, Wilbur Haynie, Dion Henderson, Ernest Herbert, Leon Hicks, Hector Hill, Tony Hill, Geoffrey Holder, Al Hollingsworth, Varnette Honeywood, Earl Hooks, Humbert Howard, James Howard, Raymond Howell, Julien Hudson, Manuel Hughes, Margo Humphrey, Thomas Hunster, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Norman Hunter, Orville Hurt, Bill Hutson, Nell Ingram, Tanya Izanhour, Ambrose Jackson, Earl Jackson, May Jackson, Nigel Jackson, Suzanne Jackson, Walter Jackson, Louise Jefferson, Ted Joans, Daniel Johnson, Lester L. Malvin Gray Johnson, Marie Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Barbara Jones, Ben Jones, Calvin Jones, Frederick D. James Arlington Jones, Lawrence Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Eddie Jack Jordan, Ronald Joseph, Lemuel Joyner, Paul Keene, Elyse J.

Kennart, Joseph Kersey, Gwendolyn Knight, Lawrence Compton Kolawole, Oliver LaGrone, Artis Lane, Doyle Lane, Raymond Lark, Lewis H. Latimer, Jacob Lawrence, Clarence Lawson, Bertina Lee, Joanna Lee, Peter Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Leon Leonard, Curtis Lewis, Edmonia Lewis, James Edward Lewis, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Charles Lilly, Henri Linton, Jules Lion, Romeyn Lippman, Tom Lloyd, Jon Lockard, Juan Logan, Willie Longshore, Ed Loper, Ed Love, Al Loving, Geraldine McCullough, Lawrence McGaugh, Charles McGee, Donald McIlvaine, James McMillan, William McNeil, Lloyd McNeill, David Mann, William Marshall, Helen Mason, Philip Mason, Winifred Mason, Calvin Massey, Lester (Nathan) Mathews, William Maxwell, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Yvonne Meo, Sam Middleton, Onnie Millar, Aaron Miller, Eva Miller, Lev Mills, P'lla Mills, Evangeline J. Montgomery, Arthur Monroe, Frank Moore, Ron Moore, Scipio Moorhead, Norma Morgan, Ken Morris, Calvin Morrison, Jimmie Mosely, Leo Moss, Lottie Moss, Archibald Motley, Hugh Mulzac, Frank Neal, George Neal, Otto Neals, Shirley Nero, Effie Newsome, Nommo, George Norman, Georg Olden, Ademola Olugebefola, Conora O'Neal (fashion designer), Cora O'Neal, Lula O'Neal, Pearl O'Neal, Ron O'Neal, Hayward Oubré, John Outterbridge, Carl Owens, Lorenzo Pace, Alvin Paige, Robert Paige, William Pajaud, Denise Palm, Norman Parish, Jules Parker, James Parks, Edgar Patience, Angela Perkins, Marion Perkins, Michael Perry, Jacqueline Peters, Douglas Phillips, Harper Phillips, Delilah Pierce, Howardena Pindell, Horace Pippin, Julie Ponceau, James Porter, Leslie Price, Ramon Price, Nelson Primus, Nancy Prophet, Noah Purifoy, Teodoro Ramos Blanco y Penita, Otis Rathel, Patrick Reason, William Reid, John Rhoden, Barbara Chase-Riboud, William Richmond, Percy Ricks, Gary Rickson, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Malkia Roberts, Brenda Rogers, Charles Rogers, George Rogers, Arthur Rose, Nancy Rowland, Winfred Russell, Mahler Ryder, Betye Saar, Charles Sallee, Marion Sampler, John Sanders, Walter Sanford, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Thomas Sills, Carroll Simms, Jewel Simon, Walter Simon, Merton Simpson, William H. Simpson, Louis Slaughter, Gwen Small, Albert A.

Smith, Alvin Smith, Hughie Lee-Smith, John Henry Smith, Jacob Lawrence, John Steptoe, Nelson Stevens, Edward Stidum, Elmer C. Stoner, Lou Stovall, Henry O. Tanner, Ralph Tate, Betty Blayton Taylor, Della Taylor, Bernita Temple, Herbert Temple, Alma Thomas, Elaine Thomas, Larry Thomas, Carolyn Thompson, Lovett Thompson, Mildred Thompson, Mozelle Thompson, Robert (Bob) Thompson, Dox Thrash, Neptune Thurston, John Torres, Nat Turner, Leo Twiggs, Bernard Upshur, Royce Vaughn, Ruth Waddy, Anthony Walker, Earl Walker, Larry Walker, William Walker, Daniel Warburg, Eugene Warburg, Carole Ward, Laura Waring, Mary P.

Washington, James Watkins, Lawrence Watson, Edward Webster, Allen A. Weeks, Robert Weil, James Wells, Pheoris West, Sarah West, John Weston, Delores Wharton, Amos White, Charles White, Garrett Whyte, Alfredus Williams, Chester Williams, Douglas R. Williams, Laura Williams, Matthew Williams, Morris Williams, Peter Williams, Rosetta Williams (as Rosita), Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Ed Wilson, Ellis Wilson, Fred Wilson, John Wilson, Stanley Wilson, Vincent Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Bernard Wright, Charles Young, Kenneth Young, Milton Young. Note the 3rd edition consists of two volumes published by Gale Research in 1980, with a third supplemental volume issued in 1985.

Large stout 4tos, red cloth. An index to Black American artists. Also includes art historians such as Henri Ghent. In this database, only artists are cross-referenced. Paris Noir: African Americans in the City of Light.

A history of the African American cultural presence in Paris from writers Richard Wright, Chester Himes, James Baldwin to musicians Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, Sidney Bechet, Arthur Briggs, Bill Coleman, performers such as Josephine Baker, and painters and sculptors such as Henry Ossawa Tanner, Lois Mailou Jones, Romare Bearden, Harold Cousins, John Wilson, Richard Boggers, Barbara Chase-Riboud, and many, many more. The Black Artist in America: An Index to Reproductions.

Includes: index to Black artists, bibliography including doctoral dissertations and audiovisual materials. Many of the dozens of spelling errors and incomplete names have been corrected in this entry and names of known white artists omitted from our entry, but errors may still exist in this entry, so beware: Jesse Aaron, Charles Abramson, Maria Adair, Lauren Adam, Ovid P. Adams, Ron Adams, Terry Adkins, (Jonathan) Ta Coumba T. Aiken, Jacques Akins, Lawrence E. Alexander, Tina Allen, Pauline Alley-Barnes, Charles Alston, Frank Alston, Charlotte Amevor, Emma Amos (Levine), Allie Anderson, Benny Andrews, Edmund Minor Archer, Pastor Argudin y Pedroso as Y.

Pedroso Argudin, Anna Arnold, Ralph Arnold, William Artis, Kwasi Seitu Asante [as Kwai Seitu Asantey], Steve Ashby, Rose Auld, Ellsworth Ausby, Henry Avery, Charles Axt, Roland Ayers, Annabelle Bacot, Calvin Bailey, Herman Kofi Bailey, Malcolm Bailey, Annabelle Baker, E. Loretta Ballard, Jene Ballentine, Casper Banjo, Bill Banks, Ellen Banks, John W. Banks, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Curtis R. Barnes, Ernie Barnes, James MacDonald Barnsley, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Daniel Carter Beard, Romare Bearden, Phoebe Beasley, Falcon Beazer, Arthello Beck, Sherman Beck, Cleveland Bellow, Gwendolyn Bennett, Herbert Bennett, Ed Bereal, Arthur Berry, Devoice Berry, Ben Bey, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Eloise Bishop, Robert Blackburn, Tarleton Blackwell, Lamont K.

Bland, Betty Blayton, Gloria Bohanon, Hawkins Bolden, Leslie Bolling, Shirley Bolton, Higgins Bond, Erma Booker, Michael Borders, Ronald Boutte, Siras Bowens, Lynn Bowers, Frank Bowling, David Bustill Bowser, David Patterson Boyd, David Bradford, Harold Bradford, Peter Bradley, Fred Bragg, Winston Branch, Brumsic Brandon, James Brantley, William Braxton, Bruce Brice, Arthur Britt, James Britton, Sylvester Britton, Moe Brooker, Bernard Brooks, Mable Brooks, Oraston Brooks-el, David Scott Brown, Elmer Brown, Fred Brown, Frederick Brown, Grafton Brown, James Andrew Brown, Joshua Brown, Kay Brown, Marvin Brown, Richard Brown, Samuel Brown, Vivian Browne, Henry Brownlee, Beverly Buchanan, Selma Burke, Arlene Burke-Morgan, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Cecil Burton, Charles Burwell, Nathaniel Bustion, David Butler, Carole Byard, Albert Byrd, Walter Cade, Joyce Cadoo, Bernard Cameron, Simms Campbell, Frederick Campbell, Thomas Cannon (as Canon), Nicholas Canyon, John Carlis, Arthur Carraway, Albert Carter, Allen Carter, George Carter, Grant Carter, Ivy Carter, Keithen Carter, Robert Carter, William Carter, Yvonne Carter, George Washington Carver, Bernard Casey, Yvonne Catchings, Elizabeth Catlett, Frances Catlett, Mitchell Caton, Catti, Charlotte Chambless, Dana Chandler, John Chandler, Robin Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Kitty Chavis, Edward Christmas, Petra Cintron, George Clack, Claude Clark Sr. Claude Lockhart Clark, Edward Clark, Irene Clark, LeRoy Clarke, Pauline Clay, Denise Cobb, Gylbert Coker, Marion Elizabeth Cole, Archie Coleman, Floyd Coleman, Donald Coles, Robert Colescott, Carolyn Collins, Paul Collins, Richard Collins, Samuel Collins, Don Concholar, Wallace Conway, Houston Conwill, William A. Cooper, Arthur Coppedge, Jean Cornwell, Eldzier Cortor, Samuel Countee, Harold Cousins, Cleo Crawford, Marva Cremer, Ernest Crichlow, Norma Criss, Allan Rohan Crite, Harvey Cropper, Geraldine Crossland, Rushie Croxton, Doris Crudup, Dewey Crumpler, Emilio Cruz, Charles Cullen (White artist), Vince Cullers, Michael Cummings, Urania Cummings, DeVon Cunningham, Samuel Curtis, William Curtis, Artis Dameron, Mary Reed Daniel, Aaron Darling, Alonzo Davis, Bing Davis, Charles Davis, Dale Davis, Rachel Davis, Theresa Davis, Ulysses Davis, Walter Lewis Davis, Charles C. Davis, William Dawson, Juette Day, Roy DeCarava, Avel DeKnight, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Nadine Delawrence, Louis Delsarte, Richard Dempsey, J. Brooks Dendy, III (as Brooks Dendy), James Denmark, Murry DePillars, Joseph DeVillis, Robert D'Hue, Kenneth Dickerson, Voris Dickerson, Charles Dickson, Frank Dillon, Leo Dillon, Robert Dilworth, James Donaldson, Jeff Donaldson, Lillian Dorsey, William Dorsey, Aaron Douglas, Emory Douglas, Calvin Douglass, Glanton Dowdell, John Dowell, Sam Doyle, David Driskell, Ulric S. Dunbar, Robert Duncanson, Eugenia Dunn, John Morris Dunn, Edward Dwight, Adolphus Ealey, Lawrence Edelin, William Edmondson, Anthony Edwards, Melvin Edwards, Eugene Eda [as Edy], John Elder, Maurice Ellison, Walter Ellison, Mae Engron, Annette Easley, Marion Epting, Melvyn Ettrick (as Melvin), Clifford Eubanks, Minnie Evans, Darrell Evers, Frederick Eversley, Cyril Fabio, James Fairfax, Kenneth Falana, Josephus Farmer, John Farrar, William Farrow, Malaika Favorite, Elton Fax, Tom Feelings, Claude Ferguson, Violet Fields, Lawrence Fisher, Thomas Flanagan, Walter Flax, Frederick Flemister, Mikelle Fletcher, Curt Flood, Batunde Folayemi, George Ford, Doyle Foreman, Leroy Foster, Walker Foster, John Francis, Richard Franklin, Ernest Frazier, Allan Freelon, Gloria Freeman, Pam Friday, John Fudge, Meta Fuller, Ibibio Fundi, Ramon Gabriel, Alice Gafford, West Gale, George Gamble, Reginald Gammon, Christine Gant, Jim Gary, Adolphus Garrett, Leroy Gaskin, Lamerol A. Gatewood, Herbert Gentry, Joseph Geran, Ezekiel Gibbs, William Giles, Sam Gilliam, Robert Glover, William Golding, Paul Goodnight, Erma Gordon, L. Gordon, Robert Gordon, Russell Gordon, Rex Goreleigh, Bernard Goss, Joe Grant, Oscar Graves, Todd Gray, Annabelle Green, James Green, Jonathan Green, Robert Green, Donald Greene, Michael Greene, Joseph Grey, Charles Ron Griffin, Eugene Grigsby, Raymond Grist, Michael Gude, Ethel Guest, John Hailstalk, Charles Haines, Horathel Hall, Karl Hall, Wesley Hall, Edward Hamilton, Eva Hamlin-Miller, David Hammons, James Hampton, Phillip Hampton, Marvin Harden, Inge Hardison, John Hardrick, Edwin Harleston, William Harper, Hugh Harrell, Oliver Harrington, Gilbert Harris, Hollon Harris, John Harris, Scotland J. Harris, Warren Harris, Bessie Harvey, Maren Hassinger, Cynthia Hawkins (as Thelma), William Hawkins, Frank Hayden, Kitty Hayden, Palmer Hayden, William Hayden, Vertis Hayes, Anthony Haynes, Wilbur Haynie, Benjamin Hazard, June Hector, Dion Henderson, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, William Henderson, Barkley Hendricks, Gregory A. Henry, Robert Henry, Ernest Herbert, James Herring, Mark Hewitt, Leon Hicks, Renalda Higgins, Hector Hill, Felrath Hines, Alfred Hinton, Tim Hinton, Adrienne Hoard, Irwin Hoffman, Raymond Holbert, Geoffrey Holder, Robin Holder, Lonnie Holley, Alvin Hollingsworth, Eddie Holmes, Varnette Honeywood, Earl J. Hooks, Ray Horner, Paul Houzell, Helena Howard, Humbert Howard, John Howard, Mildred Howard, Raymond Howell, William Howell, Calvin Hubbard, Henry Hudson, Julien Hudson, James Huff, Manuel Hughes, Margo Humphrey, Raymond Hunt, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Elliott Hunter, Arnold Hurley, Bill Hutson, Zell Ingram, Sue Irons, A. Jackson, Gerald Jackson, Harlan Jackson, Hiram Jackson, May Jackson, Oliver Jackson, Robert Jackson, Suzanne Jackson, Walter Jackson, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Bob James, Wadsworth Jarrell, Jasmin Joseph [as Joseph Jasmin], Archie Jefferson, Rosalind Jeffries, Noah Jemison, Barbara Fudge Jenkins, Florian Jenkins, Chester Jennings, Venola Jennings, Wilmer Jennings, Georgia Jessup, Johana, Daniel Johnson, Edith Johnson, Harvey Johnson, Herbert Johnson, Jeanne Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Marie Johnson-Calloway, Milton Derr (as Milton Johnson), Sargent Johnson, William H.

Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Ben Jones, Calvin Jones, Dorcas Jones, Frank A. (as Frederic Jones), Henry B. Jones, Johnny Jones, Lawrence Arthur Jones, Leon Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Nathan Jones, Tonnie Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Jack Jordan, Cliff Joseph, Ronald Joseph, Lemuel Joyner, Edward Judie, Michael Kabu, Arthur Kaufman, Charles Keck, Paul Keene, John Kendrick, Harriet Kennedy, Leon Kennedy, Joseph Kersey; Virginia Kiah, Henri King, James King, Gwendolyn Knight, Robert Knight, Lawrence Kolawole, Brenda Lacy, (Laura) Jean Lacy, Roy LaGrone, Artis Lane, Doyle Lane, Raymond Lark, Carolyn Lawrence, Jacob Lawrence, James Lawrence, Clarence Lawson, Louis LeBlanc, James Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Lizetta LeFalle-Collins, Leon Leonard, Bruce LeVert, Edmonia Lewis, Edwin E. Lewis, Flora Lewis, James E. Lewis, Norman Lewis, Roy Lewis, Samella Lewis, Elba Lightfoot, Charles Lilly [as Lily], Arturo Lindsay, Henry Linton, Jules Lion, James Little, Marcia Lloyd, Tom Lloyd, Jon Lockard, Donald Locke, Lionel Lofton, Juan Logan, Bert Long, Willie Longshore, Edward Loper, Francisco Lord, Jesse Lott, Edward Love, Nina Lovelace, Whitfield Lovell, Alvin Loving, Ramon Loy, William Luckett, John Lutz, Don McAllister, Theadius McCall, Dindga McCannon, Edward McCluney, Jesse McCowan, Sam McCrary, Geraldine McCullough, Lawrence McGaugh, Charles McGee, Donald McIlvaine, Karl McIntosh, Joseph Mack, Edward McKay, Thomas McKinney, Alexander McMath, Robert McMillon, William McNeil, Lloyd McNeill, Clarence Major, William Majors, David Mann, Ulysses Marshall, Phillip Lindsay Mason, Lester Mathews, Sharon Matthews, William (Bill) Maxwell, Gordon Mayes, Marietta Mayes, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Victoria Meek, Leon Meeks, Yvonne Meo, Helga Meyer, Gaston Micheaux, Charles Mickens, Samuel Middleton, Onnie Millar, Aaron Miller, Algernon Miller, Don Miller, Earl Miller, Eva Hamlin Miller, Guy Miller, Julia Miller, Charles Milles, Armsted Mills, Edward Mills, Lev Mills, Priscilla Mills (P'lla), Carol Mitchell, Corinne Mitchell, Tyrone Mitchell, Arthur Monroe, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ronald Moody, Ted Moody, Frank Moore, Ron Moore, Sabra Moore, Theophilus Moore, William Moore, Leedell Moorehead, Scipio Moorhead, Clarence Morgan, Norma Morgan, Sister Gertrude Morgan, Patricia Morris, Keith Morrison, Lee Jack Morton, Jimmie Mosely, David Mosley, Lottie Moss, Archibald Motley, Hugh Mulzac, Betty Murchison, J.

Murry, Teixera Nash, Inez Nathaniel, Frank Neal, George Neal, Jerome Neal, Robert Neal, Otto Neals, Robert Newsome, James Newton, Rochelle Nicholas, John Nichols, Isaac Nommo, Oliver Nowlin, Trudell Obey, Constance Okwumabua, Osira Olatunde, Kermit Oliver, Yaounde Olu, Ademola Olugebefola, Mary O'Neal, Haywood Oubré, Simon Outlaw, John Outterbridge, Joseph Overstreet, Carl Owens, Winnie Owens-Hart, Lorenzo Pace, William Pajaud, Denise Palm, James Pappas, Christopher Parks, James Parks, Louise Parks, Vera Parks, Oliver Parson, James Pate, Edgar Patience, John Payne, Leslie Payne, Sandra Peck, Alberto Pena, Angela Perkins, Marion Perkins, Michael Perry, Bertrand Phillips, Charles James Phillips, Harper Phillips, Ted Phillips, Delilah Pierce, Elijah Pierce, Harold Pierce, Anderson Pigatt, Stanley Pinckney, Howardena Pindell, Elliott Pinkney, Jerry Pinkney, Robert Pious, Adrian Piper, Horace Pippin, Betty Pitts, Stephanie Pogue, Naomi Polk, Charles Porter, James Porter, Georgette Powell, Judson Powell, Richard Powell, Daniel Pressley, Leslie Price, Ramon Price, Nelson Primus, Arnold Prince, E. Proctor, Nancy Prophet, Ronnie Prosser, William Pryor, Noah Purifoy, Florence Purviance, Martin Puryear, Mavis Pusey, Teodoro Ramos Blanco y Penita, Helen Ramsaran, Joseph Randolph; Thomas Range, Frank Rawlings, Jennifer Ray, Maxine Raysor, Patrick Reason, Roscoe Reddix, Junius Redwood, James Reed, Jerry Reed, Donald Reid, O. Richard Reid, Robert Reid, Leon Renfro, John Rhoden, Ben Richardson, Earle Richardson, Enid Richardson, Gary Rickson, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Haywood Rivers, Arthur Roach, Malkia Roberts, Royal Robertson, Aminah Robinson, Charles Robinson, John N. Robinson, Brenda Rogers, Charles Rogers, Herbert Rogers, Juanita Rogers, Sultan Rogers, Bernard Rollins, Henry Rollins, Arthur Rose, Charles Ross, James Ross, Nellie Mae Rowe, Sandra Rowe, Nancy Rowland, Winfred Russsell, Mahler Ryder, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Charles Sallee, JoeSam.

Marion Sampler, Bert Samples, Juan Sanchez, Eve Sandler, Walter Sanford, Floyd Sapp, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, Ann Sawyer, Sydney Schenck, Vivian Schuyler Key, John Scott (Johnny) , John Tarrell Scott, Joyce Scott, William Scott, Charles Searles, Charles Sebree, Bernard Sepyo, Bennie Settles, Franklin Shands, Frank Sharpe, Christopher Shelton, Milton Sherrill, Thomas Sills, Gloria Simmons, Carroll Simms, Jewell Simon, Walter Simon, Coreen Simpson, Ken Simpson, Merton Simpson, William Simpson, Michael Singletary (as Singletry), Nathaniel Sirles, Margaret Slade (Kelley), Van Slater, Louis Sloan, Albert A. Smith, Alvin Smith, Arenzo Smith, Damballah Dolphus Smith, Floyd Smith, Frank Smith, George Smith, Howard Smith, John Henry Smith, Marvin Smith, Mary T. Smith, Sue Jane Smith, Vincent Smith, William Smith, Zenobia Smith, Rufus Snoddy, Sylvia Snowden, Carroll Sockwell, Ben Solowey, Edgar Sorrells, Georgia Speller, Henry Speller, Shirley Stark, David Stephens, Lewis Stephens, Walter Stephens, Erik Stephenson, Nelson Stevens, Mary Stewart, Renée Stout, Edith Strange, Thelma Streat, Richard Stroud, Dennis Stroy, Charles Suggs, Sharon Sulton, Johnnie Swearingen, Earle Sweeting, Roderick Sykes, Clarence Talley, Ann Tanksley, Henry O. Tanner, James Tanner, Ralph Tate, Carlton Taylor, Cecil Taylor, Janet Taylor Pickett, Lawrence Taylor, William (Bill) Taylor, Herbert Temple, Emerson Terry, Evelyn Terry, Freida Tesfagiorgis, Alma Thomas, Charles Thomas, James "Son Ford" Thomas, Larry Erskine Thomas, Matthew Thomas, Roy Thomas, William Thomas a. Juba Solo, Conrad Thompson, Lovett Thompson, Mildred Thompson, Phyllis Thompson, Bob Thompson, Russ Thompson, Dox Thrash, Mose Tolliver, William Tolliver, Lloyd Toone, John Torres, Elaine Towns, Bill Traylor, Charles Tucker, Clive Tucker, Yvonne Edwards Tucker, Charlene Tull, Donald Turner, Leo Twiggs, Alfred Tyler, Anna Tyler, Barbara Tyson Mosley, Bernard Upshur, Jon Urquhart, Florestee Vance, Ernest Varner, Royce Vaughn, George Victory, Harry Vital, Ruth Waddy, Annie Walker, Charles Walker, Clinton Walker, Earl Walker, Lawrence Walker, Raymond Walker a.

Bo Walker, William Walker, Bobby Walls, Daniel Warburg, Eugene Warburg, Denise Ward-Brown, Evelyn Ware, Laura Waring, Masood Ali Warren, Horace Washington, James Washington, Mary Washington, Timothy Washington, Richard Waters, James Watkins, Curtis Watson, Howard Watson, Willard Watson, Richard Waytt, Claude Weaver, Stephanie Weaver, Clifton Webb, Derek Webster, Edward Webster, Albert Wells, James Wells, Roland Welton, Barbara Wesson, Pheoris West, Lamonte Westmoreland, Charles White, Cynthia White, Franklin White, George White, J. Philip White, Jack White (sculptor), Jack White (painter), John Whitmore, Jack Whitten, Garrett Whyte, Benjamin Wigfall, Bertie Wiggs, Deborah Wilkins, Timothy Wilkins, Billy Dee Williams, Chester Williams, Douglas Williams, Frank Williams, George Williams, Gerald Williams, Jerome Williams, Jose Williams, Laura Williams, Matthew Williams, Michael K.

Williams, Pat Ward Williams, Randy Williams, Roy Lee Williams, Todd Williams, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Yvonne Williams, Philemona Williamson, Stan Williamson, Luster Willis, A. Wilson, Edward Wilson, Ellis Wilson, Fred Wilson, George Wilson, Henry Wilson, John Wilson, Stanley C.

Wilson, Linda Windle, Eugene Winslow, Vernon Winslow, Cedric Winters, Viola Wood, Hale Woodruff, Roosevelt Woods, Shirley Woodson, Beulah Woodard, Bernard Wright, Dmitri Wright, Estella Viola Wright, George Wright, Richard Wyatt, Frank Wyley, Richard Yarde, James Yeargans, Joseph Yoakum, Bernard Young, Charles Young, Clarence Young, Kenneth Young, Milton Young. Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University.

12 Black Artists from Boston. Portraits of artists, brief biogs. Statements by William Seitz, Dana Chandler. Artists include: Calvin Burnett, Dana Chandler, Babaluaiye S.

Délé (Stanley Pinckney), Henry DeLeon, Jerry Pinkney, Gary Rickson, Leo A. Smith, Richard Stroud, Lovett Thompson, John Wilson, Richard Yarde. Paper Trail II: Passing Through Clouds.

Group exhibition of work by 46 artists. Curated by Odili Donald Odita.

Included: Emilio Cruz, Ellen Gallagher, John Wilson, and Richard Yarde. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. A Checklist of the Collection. Description of holdings as of 1977, including materials by: Charles Alston, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Cinque Gallery, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Roy DeCarava, Avel DeKnight, Joseph Delaney, Melvin Edwards, Allen Fannin and Dorothy Fannin [as Farmen], Dakar Festival, Harmon Foundation, Palmer Hayden, Al Hollingsworth, Sargent Johnson, Cliff Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Edward Loper, Al Loving, Charles McGee, John Outterbridge, Howardena Pindell, Horace Pippin, John Rhoden, Faith Ringgold, Bill Rivers, Thomas Sills, Merton Simpson, Edward Spriggs, Henry Tanner, James Washington, Weusi Gallery, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff.

Howard University Gallery of Art. Exhibition of Graphic Arts and Drawings by Negro Artists. Curated and text by James V. Artists included: prints by Samuel Brown, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Roy DeCarava, William Farrow, Allan Freelon, Harlan Jackson, Wilmer Jennings, Fred D. Jones, Lawrence Jones, James C. McMillan, Patrick Reason, Bryant Ringle, Charles Sallee, Albert Smith, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. Drawings by Selma Burke, Frank Braxton, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Freelon, Edwin Harleston, Lois Jones, Norman Lewis, James C.

McMillan, Frank Neal, James Porter, Patrick Reason, Henry O. Tanner, Annie Walker, Charles White. Rockland Center for the Arts.

Elia Alba, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Bright Bimpoong, Millie Burns, D. Hamilton Caranda-Martin, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Colin Chase, Robert Colescott, Brett Cook-Dizney, Emilio Cruz, Saliou Diouf, Mel Edwards, Collette Fournier, Herbert Gentry, Ed Kirkland, Chester Higgins, Jr. Richard Mayhew, Jackie Mitchell, Lorraine O'Grady, Joe Overstreet, Lorenzo Pace, Howardena Pindell, Debra Priestly, Helen Ramsaran, Cara Renata, Faith Ringgold, Lezley Saar, Alison Saar, George Smith, Kaneem Smith, Deborah Willis, and John Wilson. African-American Printmaking, 1838 to the Present.

Of each artist, full exhib. Co-curated by Cynthia Hawkins and Lena Hyun. Included 74 works by 46 artists: Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Marvin Brown, Vivian E. Browne, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Allan R.

Freelon, Robin Holder, Margo Humphrey, Wilmer Jennings, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Ronald Joseph, Mohammad Omer Khalil, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Alvin D. Loving, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Stephanie Pogue, Patrick Reason, Faith Ringgold, Aminah Brenda L. Smith, Raymond Steth, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Mildred Thompson, Dox Thrash, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T.

Williams, John Wilson, and Hale Woodruff. Oblong 8vo, stapled pictorial wraps. Reflections: the Afro-American artist: an exhibit of paintings, sculpture, and graphics. Presented by the Winston-Salem Alumnae Chapter, Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. Included: Charles Alston, William E. Artis, Edward Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John T. Biggers, Ann Brewer, Francis H. Brown, Selma Burke, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr.

Eldzier Cortor, Barbara Collins-Eure, James Diggs, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Robert S. Duncanson, Adolphus Ealey, John Farrar, Elton Fax, Frederick C. Flemister, James Everette Funches, Jefferson Grigsby, Ethel D. Hayden, Esther Page Hill, Earl J.

Hoyle, Richard Hunt, Joshua Johnson, Lemuel L. Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Robert H.

Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Joseph Kersey, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Sam Middleton, Eva Hamlin Miller, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald J. Motley, Hayward Oubre, Delilah Pierce, Stephanie Pogue, James A. Porter, John Rhoden, Gregory D. Ridley, Irvin Riley, Charles D.

Rogers, Arthur Rose, Augusta Savage, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Thomas Sills, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Mercedes Thompson, Leo Twiggs, Laura Wheeler Waring, Roland S. Watts, James Lesesne Wells, Glenda Wharton-Little, Charles White, Walter H. Williams, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Alpha Worthy, Gilbert E. 4to 11 x 8 in.

The item "John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright" is in sale since Friday, September 11, 2020. This item is in the category "Art\Art Prints". The seller is "memorabilia111" and is located in Ann Arbor, Michigan. This item can be shipped to United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Denmark, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Czech republic, Finland, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Estonia, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Cyprus, Slovenia, Japan, Sweden, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, South africa, Thailand, Belgium, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria, Bahamas, Israel, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Norway, Saudi arabia, United arab emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Croatia, Malaysia, Chile, Colombia, Panama, Jamaica, Barbados, Bangladesh, Bermuda, Brunei darussalam, Bolivia, Ecuador, Egypt, French guiana, Guernsey, Gibraltar, Guadeloupe, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan, Cambodia, Cayman islands, Liechtenstein, Sri lanka, Luxembourg, Monaco, Macao, Martinique, Maldives, Nicaragua, Oman, Peru, Pakistan, Paraguay, Reunion, Viet nam, Uruguay.
  • Original/Reproduction: Original Print
  • Signed: Signed
  • Edition Type: Limited Edition
  • Edition Size: 60
  • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
  • Date of Creation: 2000-Now
  • Subject: Figures & Portraits
  • Print Type: Aquatint
  • Size Type/Largest Dimension: Medium (Up to 30in.
    John Woodrow Wilson Death of Lulu Black African American Ltd Ed Richard Wright