ACA Galleries is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition that celebrates the range of styles and content in paintings, drawings and sculptures by African American artists from the 19th century to the present.
Book signing with Faith Ringgold and Lisa Farrington:
Saturday, November 19 from 2 - 4 pm
Highlights of the exhibition include a selection of paintings by Edward Mitchell Bannister (1828-1901), a Canadian-American Tonalist painter primarily known for his landscapes. In 1876 he won first prize at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition; the first African American artist to receive a national award.
Featured will be several works by Charles Ethan Porter (c. 1847-1923), an American Still Life painter. He is among the few African American artists of the 19th and early 20th century to work full time as an artist and was one of the first African American artists to exhibit at the National Academy of Design in NYC. The 2008 traveling show, organized by the New Britain Museum of American Art, was the first museum exhibition of his work and traveled to the Studio Museum in Harlem.
Robert Scott Duncanson (1821-1872), associated with the Hudson River School, was self-taught. His inherent ability and meticulous technique caught the attention of wealthy patrons who commissioned the artist to create murals and portraits, elevating his standing and respect in the community. By the 1860s the American press proclaimed him the "best landscape painter in the West," while London newspapers hailed him as the equal of his British contemporaries.
Work by Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Elizabeth Catlett, Robert Colescott, Beauford Delaney, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Faith Ringgold, Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson, Henry O. Tanner, Charles White and Hale Woodruff, among others will also be on view.
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