: African American Art at the VMFA
"Generations," an exhibit of African American art at the Virginia
Museum of Fine Arts, explores the museum's collection of African
American art from the early Twentieth Century to the present. The
exhibition features half of the 60 works by African American
artists in the permanent collection and includes paintings,
sculpture, prints, drawings and photographs.
"Generations" also represents two distinct periods of collecting
history - from the 1950s through the 1970s and since 1980. Works
by local and regional artists are shown with those by artists
known nationally and internationally. The exhibition will remain
on view through November 30.
Photographer James VanDerZee (1886-1983) was born in Lenox, Mass.
While his career spanned nearly 80 years, he is best known for
thousands of images made in Harlem between the two world wars
when he ran a commercial photo studio there. His sensitive
portrayals of women and children illustrate his interest in
classical portraiture.
As the modern city began to dominate American life early in the
Twentieth Century, artists portrayed urban scenes with increasing
frequency. Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000) included images of subways
and mass transportation in his work. An heir to the Harlem
Renaissance, Lawrence worked as a painter on several federal arts
projects in the 1930s. He won critical acclaim throughout his
70-year career for his portrayals of the black experience.
Benjamin Wigfall was born in Richmond in 1930. He studied at
Hampton Institute (now Hampton University), in Iowa and at Yale
University. Wigfall later taught at Hampton and the State
University of New York at New Paltz.
Sculptor and installation artist Alison Saar (born in Los Angeles
in 1956) has often explored print media. Her subjects are
frequently allegorical characters from diverse cultures or people
from her everyday life. In "Snake Man" (1994), a woodcut and
lithograph on rice paper, the bust's irregular cropping recalls
fragments of ancient sculpture. The empty white eyes add a
trance-like otherworldliness, while the snake seems prepared to
strike.
The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is at 2800 Grove Avenue. For
information, 804-204-2704 or vmfa.state.va.us.