ERIC Number: ED394899
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 1993
Pages: 41
Abstractor: N/A
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: N/A
EISSN: N/A
Available Date: N/A
ASHE: Improvisation & Recycling in African-American Visionary Art.
Patterson, Tom
This exhibition guide provides critical analysis, historical perspective, and brief biographies of 15 self-taught African-American artists whose works were displayed. "Ashe," an African word meaning "the power to make things happen," was used as the theme of the exhibition. The guide verbalizes the exhibit's investigation of the methods of making art and the motives of the makers by exploring the choice of materials (recycled objects) and the modes of creation (improvisational). Chapter one is entitled "Sorting Out a Context for Self-taught Art." The critique also examines the works' intellectual lineage traced from African spiritualism. Artists featured in this exhibition are: (1) E. M. Bailey; (2) Hawkins Bolden; (3) T. J. Bowman; (4) Thornton Dial; (5) Thornton Dial, Jr.; (6) Ralph Griffin; (7) Bessie Harvey; (8) Lonnie Holley; (9) Joe Light; (10) Ronald Lockett; (11) Charlie Lucas; (12) Leroy Person; (13) Juanita Rogers; (14) Arthur Spain; and (15) Jimmie Lee Sudduth. (MM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Arts Centers, Black Achievement, Blacks, Reference Materials, Secondary Education, Visual Arts
Publication Type: Reference Materials - Directories/Catalogs; Opinion Papers
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: North Carolina Arts Council, Raleigh.
Authoring Institution: Winston-Salem State Univ., NC. Diggs Gallery.
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A
Author Affiliations: N/A