:"Something to Look Forward To," an exhibition featuring abstract
images and objects by 22 celebrated African American artists over
the age of 60, will be on display at the Heckscher Museum of Art
from June 2 through August 14.
The exhibition of sculptures, works on paper, furniture and
multimedia was created by the artists and highlights the
exceptional talent, unique vision and courageous persistence of
mature artists who have created dynamic forms of abstract art.
This show features work by Betty Blayton, Frank Bowling, Yvonne
Pickering Carter, Edward Clark, Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam,
David Hammons, Gerald Jackson, Lawrence Compton Kalawole,
Howardena Pindell, Alvin Loving, Richard Mayhew, Sam Middleton,
Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Joe Overstreet, Howardena Pindell, Helen
Evans Ramsaran, John T. Scott, Sylvia Snowden, and the late
Mildred Thompson, Jack Whitten, William T. Williams and Frank
Wimberly. Two works, created six to ten years apart, represent
each artist.
Curated for The Phillips Museum of Art by Bill Hutson, then Cook
Distinguished Artist-in-Residence at Franklin & Marshall
College, the exhibition opened at the college museum in March
2004. The Heckscher is the first venue of "Something to Look
Forward To" in a national tour circulated by Smith Kramer Fine
Art Services.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalog with essays by April
Kingsley, art critic and curator of the Kresge Art Museum at
Michigan State University; Art Asia Pacific
editor-in-chief Franklin Sirmans; and poet and essayist Geoffrey
Jacques, whose doctoral dissertation examines the interaction and
interplay between literary modernism and African American
culture.
In his essay, Sirmans writes of the "grand tradition at work in
this show that needs to be explored, nourished, cherished and
supported. Through the artists and the artworks in 'Something to
Look Forward To,' we are offered first and foremost the
opportunity to see great art by great artists, but secondarily to
make consideration of abstract art that, while not totally
original, is glorious. Bringing together these artists - who all
happen to be 'black' - we can see that there is a black aesthetic
to abstract art."
The Heckscher Museum of Art is in Heckscher Park, Main Street
(Route 25A) and Prime Avenue. For information, 631-351-3250.