Exhibition Project Proposal
ARTH 302: African American Art
Exhibition Project Proposal
Due Jan. 28
Your name: India Able
Which project option are you doing – A, B, or C-level?
Look at TJC (The Johnson Collection) Checklist pdf to see the artworks available for you to
write about for this project. You can learn more about the artworks here, listed by artist’s last
name. If you are struggling to decide which works to choose, email me to ask for help!
List your first six choices of artworks to include in our exhibition that you would like to write
about. List them in order of your preference – I will try to give everyone their top choices.
- Bo Bartlett: A Good Summer
- James McMillan: Mother and Child
- Neal, Robert: (Fisherman’s House at River’s Edge)
- Rembert, Winfred: Schoolhouse (The Wood Boy)
- Scott, William: The Maker of Goblins
- Sims, Bernice: Tent Revival
Tell me about why these works interest you – this information will allow me to help each
student develop a theme. What is most compelling to you about these artworks – are there
particular mediums, subjects, styles, and/or social and historical issues that you are most
interested in researching related to these works?
Each of these artworks were chosen because they all look like pieces of artwork I want to know
more about and dig deeper into the real meaning of the artwork.
Some things to consider as you choose works:
You will not only be writing about these works individually for the exhibition, you will also be writing
about them in a larger research paper that develops a thematic issue related to these works. You
should choose artworks that are connected somehow—by subject matter, medium, historical
context, art movement or style. For example, if you are interested in writing about Black self-
taught “folk” artists, choose 2-3 works that would fit within that theme. Your thematic framework
for this can also be creative or unconventional, you don’t have to categorize things as I have
below, but I made this list to help you think about possible themes.
Themes and Artists
Here is a list of some of the major subjects and themes, and corresponding artists on the checklist
that you might consider choosing based on your interests. There are many ways to categorize
these artworks – by movement (Harlem Renaissance, social realism), by subject matter
(landscape, women, the city), by visual and material strategies (abstraction, sculpture), or by other
thematic concerns around civil rights and the lives of Black people in the 20th century. You’ll notice
that many artists can be listed across multiple themes, or produced works that could be included
in multiple categories.
ARTH 302: African American Art
Dr. Lex Lancaster
Folk art / self-taught or visionary artists: Beverly Buchanan, Ulysses Davis, Thorton Dial, Sam
Doyle, William Edmondson, Minnie Evans, William Hawkins, Clementine Hunter, Gertrude
Morgan, Elijah Pierce, Winfred Rembert, Bernice Sims, Mose Tolliver, Bill Traylor
Black feminist perspectives: Emma Amos, Lois Mailou Jones (you could approach many of
these works from a feminist perspective, even if the work does not transparently reflect that –
these two artists are just particularly identified with Black feminism)
Major art movements:
Social realism: John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, John Howard, Robert Neal, Charles White
Harlem Renaissance: Romare Bearden, Aaron Douglas, William H. Johnson, Malvin Gray
Johnson, Augusta Savage, Dox Thrash, Hale Woodruff
Visual and Material approaches:
Abstraction, or non-representational: Charles Alston, Beauford Delaney, Sam Gilliam, Romare
Bearden, Margaret Burroughs, Felrath Hines, Hayward Oubre, Mavis Pusey, Arthur Rose,
Thomas Sills, Merton Simpson, Alma Thomas, Mildred Thompson
Sculptors: William Artis, Barthe Richmond, Leslie Bolling, Selma Burke, Ulysses Davis, Hayward
Oubre, Elijah Pierce, Augusta Savage, Mose Tolliver, Winston Wingo
Printmakers: John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Margaret Burroughs, Aaron Douglas, Samella
Lewis, Lois Mailou Jones, Gwendolyn Knight, Mavis Pusey, Dox Thrash, James Wells, Charles
White, Hale Woodruff
Collage: Romare Bearden, James Denmark
Surrealist imagery: Minnie Evans, Gwendolyn Knight, Leo Twiggs
Subject Matter:
Depictions of everyday life: Ernie Barnes, Margaret Burroughs, Claude Clark, Clementine
Hunter, Wadsworth Jarrell, James McMillan, Arthur Rose
Portraiture: William Cooper, John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Aaron Douglas, Bernard Goss,
Phillip Hampton, Edwin Harleston, Charles McGee, William Scott, William Tolliver, Charles White
Landscapes, cityscapes, space: Benjamin Britt, Caliman Coxe, Joseph Delaney, Robert
Duncanson, Rex Goreleigh, Palmer Harden, James Herring, William H Johnson, Gwendolyn
Knight, Delilah Pierce, William Scott, Albert Wells, Hale Woodruff
Still life painting: Samuel Brown, Clementine Hunter, William H Johnson, Haywood Rivers,
Albert Wells
African themes: Margaret Burroughs, Lois Mailou Jones, James Porter, Ellis Wilson
Religious/Christian themes: Marie Calloway, Romare Bearden, Leo Twiggs, Purvis Young
Exhibition Project Proposal
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