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Charles W. White

Charles Wilbert White, Jr. (April 2, 1918 – October 3, 1979) was an American artist known for his chronicling of African American related subjects in paintings, drawings, lithographs, and murals. White's lifelong commitment—to chronicling the triumphs and struggles of his community in representational form—cemented him as one of the most well-known artists in African American art history. Following his death in 1979, White's work has been included in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of Chicago,[2] Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art,[3] The Newark Museum, and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.[4] White's best known work is The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy, a mural at Hampton University. In 2018, the centenary year of his birth, the first major retrospective exhibition of his work was organized by the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Modern Art.[5]

Charles White
Born
Charles Wilbert White, Jr.

(1918-04-02)April 2, 1918
DiedOctober 3, 1979(1979-10-03) (aged 61)
Los Angeles, California, US
EducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago
Known forpainting; visual art
Notable workThe Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy
MovementNew Negro Movement (Chicago Black Renaissance)
Spouse(s)Elizabeth Catlett (m. 1941-1946; divorced)
Frances Barrett (m. 1950-1979; his death)[1]

Early life and education edit

Charles Wilbert White was born on April 2, 1918, to Ethelene Gary, a domestic worker, and Charles White Sr, a railroad and construction worker, on the South Side of Chicago. Ethelene was born in Mississippi and came north in the Great Migration. She raised Charles, and as she had no child care, she would often leave him at the public library.[6] There White developed an affinity for art and reading at a young age.[7] White's mother bought him a set of oil paints when he was seven years old, which hooked White on painting. White also played music as a child, studied modern dance, and was part of theatre groups; however, he stated that art was his true passion.

White's mother also took him to the Art Institute of Chicago, where he would read and look at paintings—developing a particular interest in the works of Winslow Homer and George Inness. Since White had little money growing up, he often painted on whatever surfaces he could find including shirts, cardboard, and window blinds. During the Great Depression, young White tried to conceal his passion for art in fear of embarrassment; however, this ended when White got a job painting signs at the age of fourteen. White learned how to mix paints by sitting-in every day for a week on an Art Institute sponsored painting class that was taking place at a park near his home.[8] His mother remarried when White's father died in 1926. She married a steel mill worker who would become an abusive alcoholic, especially towards a young White. This experience lead him to escape into art. White had few opportunities to pursue his natural talent at this time due to the abuse and lack of resources from his household which was economically insufficient.[9] This is also the same year his mother began sending him to Mississippi twice a year to his aunts, Hasty and Harriet Baines, where he would learn about his heritage and African American Southern folklore. White showed persistence while battling abuse and poverty. He used his own experiences, curiosity and feelings about the neglected history of African Americans to help shape a common theme within his work.[7] An early activist, as a teenager, he volunteered his talents and became the house artist at the National Negro Congress in Chicago.[6] Later, in a union with fellow black artists, White was arrested while picketing.[7]

White won a grant during the seventh grade to attend Saturday art classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. After reading Alain Locke's book The New Negro: An Interpretation, a critique of the Harlem Renaissance,[10] White's social views changed. He learned after reading Locke's text about important African American figures in American history, and questioned his teachers on why they were not taught to students in school, causing some to label him a "rebel problematic child".[7] White did not graduate from high school, having lost a year due to his refusal to attend class after being disillusioned with the teaching system. While he was encouraged by his art teachers to submit his art works and won various scholarships, these would later be declared an "error" and be taken away from him and given to whites instead.[7] He was admitted to two art schools, each then pulled his acceptance because of his race.[11]

White ultimately received a full scholarship to attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. While there, White identified Mitchell Siporin, Francis Chapin, and Aaron Bohrod as his influences. He was an excellent draftsman, completing five drawing courses and received a final "A grade".[12] To pay the costs of art supplies, White became a cook, using his mother's instruction and recipes. White later became an art teacher at St. Elizabeth Catholic High School.[8]

Career edit

In 1940, White stated in an interview, "I am interested in the social, even the propagandistic angle of painting that will say what I have to say. Paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent."[13] In 1938, White was hired by the Illinois Art Project, a state affiliate of the Works Progress Administration. His work received an extended showing at the Chicago Coliseum during the Exhibition of the Art of the American Negro, which was part of the American Negro Exposition commemorating the 75th anniversary of Thirteenth Amendment ending slavery.[14] An important figure in what became known as the Chicago Black Renaissance, White taught art classes at the Southside Community Art Center.[6] Following his first show at Paragon Studios in Cincinnati in 1938, White's work was exhibited widely throughout the United States, including, among many others, exhibitions at the Roko Gallery, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. In 1939 he produced his WPA mural Five Great American Negroes, now at Howard University Gallery of Art.[11] White also showed at the Palace of Culture in Warsaw and the Pushkin Museum. In 1976 his work was featured in Two Centuries of Black American Art, LACMA's first exhibition devoted exclusively to African-American Artists.[15]

White moved to New Orleans in 1941 to teach at Dillard University. Beginning in that year, he was married briefly to famed sculptor and printmaker Elizabeth Catlett, who also taught at Dillard.[14] He served in the US Army during WWII, but was discharged when he contracted tuberculosis (TB). White and Catlett moved to New York City and also studied together at an arts collective in Mexico City. While in New York City White learned lithography and etching techniques at the Arts Student League, taking direction from renowned artist Harry Sternberg who encouraged him to move beyond “stylization to individuation in his figures”.  It was here where White honed his technical skills and developed a more deepened vision of black society.[9] White along with Catlett met a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany named Viktor Lowenfeld who taught at Hampton Institute in Virginia. Lowenfeld invited the couple to teach at Hampton. Taking Sternberg advice to heart, White would go on to paint one of his most famous works, ''The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy" at Hampton Institute.

Printmaking enabled White to reach a wider public more directly and allowed him to bring together his social commitment and artistic practice. Although he had long been aware of art’s social utility, with his lithographs and linocuts he was finally able to communicate with a large, cross-national community of black workers and socialist artists, as opposed to his paintings, which were generally tied to individual purchasers. He started providing political cartoons for the Daily Worker and, in 1953, he published in association with Masses and Mainstream a portfolio of six reproductions of his ink-and-charcoal drawings, entitled 'Charles White: Six Drawings'. Priced at only $3, this portfolio aimed at getting art to the people, a main concern for progressive artists of the period. In this respect it was a great success, and White himself acknowledged this as he learned that a group of workers in Alabama combined their savings to buy a portfolio and shared the pictures among themselves.[16]

In 1956, due to continued breathing problems (perhaps arising from the earlier case of TB), White moved to Los Angeles for its drier, more mild climate.[6] From 1965 to his death in 1979, White taught at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles.[17] On faculty at Otis, he was a beacon for African American artists who came to study with him.[18] Among those he taught were Alonzo Davis, David Hammons, and Kerry James Marshall.[19] An elementary school was named after him and is located on the former Otis College campus.[20][21] Later in life White moved to Altadena, California where he remained until his death of congestive heart failure in 1979.

White's best known work is the mural The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy at Hampton University.[22] Measuring around 12 feet by seven feet,[23] the mural depicts a number of notable African-Americans including Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner, Peter Salem, George Washington Carver, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and Marian Anderson. White was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1972.

Legacy edit

White gained inspiration from many of his contemporaries including his first wife Elizabeth Catlett, Horace Pippin, Gordon Parks, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Cliff Joseph, John Wilson, John Biggers, and others. White helped inspire the next generation of conscious black artists including the likes of Benny Andrews, Faith Ringgold, Dana Chandler, David Hammons, Elliot Pinkney, Alonzo Adams, Kyle Olani Adams and scores of others.[9] White's works are in the collections of a number of institutions, including Atlanta University, the Barnett Aden Gallery, the Deutsche Academie der Kunste, the Dresden Museum of Art, Howard University, the Library of Congress, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Oakland Museum, the Smithsonian American Art Museum,[24] the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Syracuse University and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The CEJJES Institute of Pomona, New York, owns a number of White's works and has established a dedicated Charles W. White Gallery.[25] In 2015, Drs. Susan G. and Edmund W. Gordon of Pomona, New York donated their collection of works by Charles White to the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas, Austin.[26]

White's popularity faded after his death both because he was a person of color in an industry that unfairly favored white artists and preferred more abstract and conceptual styles in direct opposition to White's style of figurative art.[27] However White's popularity and legacy lives on in Altadena, California where he spent a great deal of his later years. Shortly after his death a park was re-named after him and it remains today the only park to be named after an American born artist. The Charles White Park hosted an annual event “Charles White Memorial Arts Festival” which brought African American and local artists into the community until its discontinuation in the 1990s.[28] Currently members of the Altadena Arts council are working with local community and other stake holders to bring the event back to the community.[29]

Reception edit

In 1982 a retrospective exhibition of White's work was held at the Studio Museum in Harlem.[6] In the 1990s, the idea of staging a major traveling retrospective exhibition arose. Ultimately, over approximately a ten year period, staff from the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Modern Art attempted to locate various White pieces to put together an extensive exhibition of his work. The exhibition opened in Chicago in 2018, traveling to New York City and Los Angeles.[30][31]

White "was a humanist, drawn to the physical body and more literal representations of the lives of African-Americans", according to Lauren Warnecke for the Chicago Tribune.[30] While this put him out of step with the abstract movement in art, the power of his work is undeniable according to the Los Angeles Times' Christopher Knight, especially White's graphic work in graphite, charcoal, crayon and ink.[32] The Washington Post art critic, Philip Kennicott finds White's work central to American art.[33] "Grace, passion, coolness, toughness, [and] beauty" mark White's work, according to Holland Cotter in The New York Times; White had "the hand of an angel" and "the eye of a sage".[11]

In November 2019, two works by White went up for the first time in Christie's and Sotheby's main-seasonal New York City contemporary art auctions. Both works, Banner for Willie J. (1976) -- a portrait of White's cousin, who was killed—and Ye Shall Inherit the Earth (1953) -- a charcoal drawing of civil rights icon Rosa Lee Ingram with a babe-in-arms—made sales records for the artist's work.[34][35][36]

References edit

  1. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths WHITE, FRANCES BARRETT". The New York Times. 15 October 2000. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  2. ^ "Charles White". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  3. ^ "Acquisition: Charles White". National Gallery of Art. April 7, 2023. Retrieved April 10, 2023.
  4. ^ "Artist Info". www.nga.gov. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  5. ^ Lopez, Ruth (June 5, 2018). "Key figure of the Chicago Black Renaissance, Charles White, finally gets his due". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
  6. ^ a b c d e Miller, M.H. (September 28, 2018). "The Man Who Taught a Generation of Black Artists Gets His Own Retrospective". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  7. ^ a b c d e . www.cejjesinstitute.org. Archived from the original on 2020-06-08. Retrieved 2017-12-05.
  8. ^ a b "Oral history interview with Charles W. White, 1965 March 9", Archives of American Art, Smithsonian.
  9. ^ a b c Blum, Paul Von (1 December 2009). "Charles White: an artist for humanity's sake". Journal of Pan African Studies. 3 (4): 27–37. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.599.690. Gale A306515936 ProQuest 237007314.
  10. ^ Sartorius, Tara Cady (February 1998). "Art across the Curriculum: Play by Play". Arts & Activities. 123 (1): 14–16. OCLC 425236169.
  11. ^ a b c Cotter, Holland (October 11, 2018). "Charles White Was a Giant, Even Among the Heroes He Painted". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  12. ^ Wilson, Alona C. (2005). "Study of Charles White". International Review of African American Art. 20 (1): 46–47.
  13. ^ Elliot, Jeffrey; White, Charles (1978). "Charles White: Portrait of an Artist". Negro History Bulletin. 41 (3): 825–828. JSTOR 44213837.
  14. ^ a b Courage, Richard A. "Charles White and the Black Chicago Renaissance". iraaa.museum.hamptonu.edu. International Review of African American Art. Hampton University. Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  15. ^ "Checklist of Artworks" (PDF). LACMA. Retrieved December 14, 2014.
  16. ^ John P. Murphy, ‘Charles White: The Politics of Print’, Print Quarterly, xxxvi, no. 2, June 2019, pp. 146–56.
  17. ^ Brock, Mary Sherwood, Otis Connections/ LA Printmaking in the 1960s (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
  18. ^ Thackara, Tess (11 October 2018). "Charles White's Artworks Made Him an Icon for Black Artists". Artsy. Artsy. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  19. ^ "Charles White". Digital Archive NOW DIG THIS!: ART AND BLACK LOS ANGELES 1960–1980. Hammer Museum. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
  20. ^ "Charles White". ucla.edu.
  21. ^ Office of Communications. . LAUSDdaily.net. LAUSD. Archived from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
  22. ^ Hocker, Cliff. "VMFA Focus on African American Art". International Review of African American Art. Retrieved December 14, 2014.
  23. ^ Breanne, Robertson (Spring 2016). "Pan-Americanism, Patriotism, and Race Pride in Charles White's Hampton Mural". American Art. 30 (1): 52–71. doi:10.1086/686548. S2CID 163452559.
  24. ^ Moser, Joann, "A Graphic Master: Charles White", Eye Level, July 14, 2009.
  25. ^ "The Charles White Gallery", The CEJJES Institute.
  26. ^ Ghorashi, Hannah (2015-05-05). "UT Austin Receives Significant Collection of Works By WPA Artist Charles White". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  27. ^ Miller, M. H. (28 September 2018). "The Man Who Taught a Generation of Black Artists Gets His Own Retrospective". The New York Times.
  28. ^ "Charles White: The Artist and the Park". Unframed. 12 September 2013.
  29. ^ Duran, Carrie Martin (2010-10-05). "Honoring Artist Charles White's Contribution to Altadena". Altadena, CA Patch. Retrieved 2019-03-13.
  30. ^ a b Warnecke, Lauren (June 15, 2018). "It's a homecoming for artist Charles White at the Art Institute". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2018-06-19.
  31. ^ Norman, Lee Ann (June 18, 2018). "Poise And Dignity In Every View, A Review of Charles White at the Art Institute of Chicago". Newcity Art. Retrieved 2018-06-19.
  32. ^ Knight, Christopher (March 7, 2019). "Review: Charles White show at LACMA pinpoints the power of an underappreciated black artist". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  33. ^ Kennicott, Philip (October 18, 2018). "Charles White, who made some of this country's greatest art, transcends labels". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 21, 2018. White should be a household name, even among people who don't closely follow the art world....It shouldn't be possible to tell the history of American art without White figuring squarely in the middle of it.
  34. ^ Tully, Judd (2019-11-15). "Abstract Expressionism Leads Sotheby's Contemporary Sale in New York, with $30.1 M. Willem de Kooning Topping Market-Affirming $270.7 M. Total". ARTNews. Retrieved 2019-11-15.
  35. ^ Reyburn, Scott; Pogrebin, Robin (15 November 2019). "For Auctions, It's 'No Froth,' but 'Steady.' That's the New Normal". The New York Times.
  36. ^ Tully, Judd (2019-11-14). "At Solid $325.3 M. Christie's Contemporary Art Sale in New York, Ed Ruscha Is King". ARTNews. Retrieved 2019-11-15.

Further reading edit

  • Finkelstein, Sidney (1953). "Charles White's Humanist Art". Masses & Mainstream. Retrieved 1 August 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Finkelstein, Sidney (1955). Charles White: Ein Künstler Amerikas. Verlag d. Kunst. p. 67. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  • The Editors of ARTnews (2018-10-26). "From the Archives: Reviews of Charles White's Exhibitions Over the Decades". ARTnews. Retrieved 2018-11-29. (reviews from 1943 to 1976 that appeared in the paper)
  • Oehler, Sarah Kelly; Adler, Esther, eds. (2018). Charles White: A Retrospective. Art Institute of Chicago. ISBN 9780300232981. OCLC 1015275517.

External links edit

  • Charles White in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art
  • Charles White: A Retrospective
  • Biographical Sketch
  • Charles White in the National Gallery of Australia's Kenneth Tyler Collection
  • Charles White in the Minneapolis Institute or Art, Minneapolis, MN

charles, white, other, people, named, charles, white, charles, white, disambiguation, charles, wilbert, white, april, 1918, october, 1979, american, artist, known, chronicling, african, american, related, subjects, paintings, drawings, lithographs, murals, whi. For other people named Charles White see Charles White disambiguation Charles Wilbert White Jr April 2 1918 October 3 1979 was an American artist known for his chronicling of African American related subjects in paintings drawings lithographs and murals White s lifelong commitment to chronicling the triumphs and struggles of his community in representational form cemented him as one of the most well known artists in African American art history Following his death in 1979 White s work has been included in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of Chicago 2 Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art the Whitney Museum of American Art the National Gallery of Art 3 The Newark Museum and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art 4 White s best known work is The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy a mural at Hampton University In 2018 the centenary year of his birth the first major retrospective exhibition of his work was organized by the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Modern Art 5 Charles WhiteBornCharles Wilbert White Jr 1918 04 02 April 2 1918Chicago Illinois USDiedOctober 3 1979 1979 10 03 aged 61 Los Angeles California USEducationSchool of the Art Institute of ChicagoKnown forpainting visual artNotable workThe Contribution of the Negro to American DemocracyMovementNew Negro Movement Chicago Black Renaissance Spouse s Elizabeth Catlett m 1941 1946 divorced Frances Barrett m 1950 1979 his death 1 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Legacy 4 Reception 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life and education editCharles Wilbert White was born on April 2 1918 to Ethelene Gary a domestic worker and Charles White Sr a railroad and construction worker on the South Side of Chicago Ethelene was born in Mississippi and came north in the Great Migration She raised Charles and as she had no child care she would often leave him at the public library 6 There White developed an affinity for art and reading at a young age 7 White s mother bought him a set of oil paints when he was seven years old which hooked White on painting White also played music as a child studied modern dance and was part of theatre groups however he stated that art was his true passion White s mother also took him to the Art Institute of Chicago where he would read and look at paintings developing a particular interest in the works of Winslow Homer and George Inness Since White had little money growing up he often painted on whatever surfaces he could find including shirts cardboard and window blinds During the Great Depression young White tried to conceal his passion for art in fear of embarrassment however this ended when White got a job painting signs at the age of fourteen White learned how to mix paints by sitting in every day for a week on an Art Institute sponsored painting class that was taking place at a park near his home 8 His mother remarried when White s father died in 1926 She married a steel mill worker who would become an abusive alcoholic especially towards a young White This experience lead him to escape into art White had few opportunities to pursue his natural talent at this time due to the abuse and lack of resources from his household which was economically insufficient 9 This is also the same year his mother began sending him to Mississippi twice a year to his aunts Hasty and Harriet Baines where he would learn about his heritage and African American Southern folklore White showed persistence while battling abuse and poverty He used his own experiences curiosity and feelings about the neglected history of African Americans to help shape a common theme within his work 7 An early activist as a teenager he volunteered his talents and became the house artist at the National Negro Congress in Chicago 6 Later in a union with fellow black artists White was arrested while picketing 7 White won a grant during the seventh grade to attend Saturday art classes at the Art Institute of Chicago After reading Alain Locke s book The New Negro An Interpretation a critique of the Harlem Renaissance 10 White s social views changed He learned after reading Locke s text about important African American figures in American history and questioned his teachers on why they were not taught to students in school causing some to label him a rebel problematic child 7 White did not graduate from high school having lost a year due to his refusal to attend class after being disillusioned with the teaching system While he was encouraged by his art teachers to submit his art works and won various scholarships these would later be declared an error and be taken away from him and given to whites instead 7 He was admitted to two art schools each then pulled his acceptance because of his race 11 White ultimately received a full scholarship to attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago While there White identified Mitchell Siporin Francis Chapin and Aaron Bohrod as his influences He was an excellent draftsman completing five drawing courses and received a final A grade 12 To pay the costs of art supplies White became a cook using his mother s instruction and recipes White later became an art teacher at St Elizabeth Catholic High School 8 Career editIn 1940 White stated in an interview I am interested in the social even the propagandistic angle of painting that will say what I have to say Paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent 13 In 1938 White was hired by the Illinois Art Project a state affiliate of the Works Progress Administration His work received an extended showing at the Chicago Coliseum during the Exhibition of the Art of the American Negro which was part of the American Negro Exposition commemorating the 75th anniversary of Thirteenth Amendment ending slavery 14 An important figure in what became known as the Chicago Black Renaissance White taught art classes at the Southside Community Art Center 6 Following his first show at Paragon Studios in Cincinnati in 1938 White s work was exhibited widely throughout the United States including among many others exhibitions at the Roko Gallery the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the Whitney Museum of American Art In 1939 he produced his WPA mural Five Great American Negroes now at Howard University Gallery of Art 11 White also showed at the Palace of Culture in Warsaw and the Pushkin Museum In 1976 his work was featured in Two Centuries of Black American Art LACMA s first exhibition devoted exclusively to African American Artists 15 White moved to New Orleans in 1941 to teach at Dillard University Beginning in that year he was married briefly to famed sculptor and printmaker Elizabeth Catlett who also taught at Dillard 14 He served in the US Army during WWII but was discharged when he contracted tuberculosis TB White and Catlett moved to New York City and also studied together at an arts collective in Mexico City While in New York City White learned lithography and etching techniques at the Arts Student League taking direction from renowned artist Harry Sternberg who encouraged him to move beyond stylization to individuation in his figures It was here where White honed his technical skills and developed a more deepened vision of black society 9 White along with Catlett met a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany named Viktor Lowenfeld who taught at Hampton Institute in Virginia Lowenfeld invited the couple to teach at Hampton Taking Sternberg advice to heart White would go on to paint one of his most famous works The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy at Hampton Institute Printmaking enabled White to reach a wider public more directly and allowed him to bring together his social commitment and artistic practice Although he had long been aware of art s social utility with his lithographs and linocuts he was finally able to communicate with a large cross national community of black workers and socialist artists as opposed to his paintings which were generally tied to individual purchasers He started providing political cartoons for the Daily Worker and in 1953 he published in association with Masses and Mainstream a portfolio of six reproductions of his ink and charcoal drawings entitled Charles White Six Drawings Priced at only 3 this portfolio aimed at getting art to the people a main concern for progressive artists of the period In this respect it was a great success and White himself acknowledged this as he learned that a group of workers in Alabama combined their savings to buy a portfolio and shared the pictures among themselves 16 In 1956 due to continued breathing problems perhaps arising from the earlier case of TB White moved to Los Angeles for its drier more mild climate 6 From 1965 to his death in 1979 White taught at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles 17 On faculty at Otis he was a beacon for African American artists who came to study with him 18 Among those he taught were Alonzo Davis David Hammons and Kerry James Marshall 19 An elementary school was named after him and is located on the former Otis College campus 20 21 Later in life White moved to Altadena California where he remained until his death of congestive heart failure in 1979 White s best known work is the mural The Contribution of the Negro to American Democracy at Hampton University 22 Measuring around 12 feet by seven feet 23 the mural depicts a number of notable African Americans including Denmark Vesey Nat Turner Peter Salem George Washington Carver Harriet Tubman Frederick Douglass and Marian Anderson White was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1972 Legacy editWhite gained inspiration from many of his contemporaries including his first wife Elizabeth Catlett Horace Pippin Gordon Parks Romare Bearden Jacob Lawrence Cliff Joseph John Wilson John Biggers and others White helped inspire the next generation of conscious black artists including the likes of Benny Andrews Faith Ringgold Dana Chandler David Hammons Elliot Pinkney Alonzo Adams Kyle Olani Adams and scores of others 9 White s works are in the collections of a number of institutions including Atlanta University the Barnett Aden Gallery the Deutsche Academie der Kunste the Dresden Museum of Art Howard University the Library of Congress the Metropolitan Museum of Art the Minneapolis Institute of Art the Oakland Museum the Smithsonian American Art Museum 24 the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art Syracuse University and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts The CEJJES Institute of Pomona New York owns a number of White s works and has established a dedicated Charles W White Gallery 25 In 2015 Drs Susan G and Edmund W Gordon of Pomona New York donated their collection of works by Charles White to the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas Austin 26 White s popularity faded after his death both because he was a person of color in an industry that unfairly favored white artists and preferred more abstract and conceptual styles in direct opposition to White s style of figurative art 27 However White s popularity and legacy lives on in Altadena California where he spent a great deal of his later years Shortly after his death a park was re named after him and it remains today the only park to be named after an American born artist The Charles White Park hosted an annual event Charles White Memorial Arts Festival which brought African American and local artists into the community until its discontinuation in the 1990s 28 Currently members of the Altadena Arts council are working with local community and other stake holders to bring the event back to the community 29 Reception editIn 1982 a retrospective exhibition of White s work was held at the Studio Museum in Harlem 6 In the 1990s the idea of staging a major traveling retrospective exhibition arose Ultimately over approximately a ten year period staff from the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Modern Art attempted to locate various White pieces to put together an extensive exhibition of his work The exhibition opened in Chicago in 2018 traveling to New York City and Los Angeles 30 31 White was a humanist drawn to the physical body and more literal representations of the lives of African Americans according to Lauren Warnecke for the Chicago Tribune 30 While this put him out of step with the abstract movement in art the power of his work is undeniable according to the Los Angeles Times Christopher Knight especially White s graphic work in graphite charcoal crayon and ink 32 The Washington Post art critic Philip Kennicott finds White s work central to American art 33 Grace passion coolness toughness and beauty mark White s work according to Holland Cotter in The New York Times White had the hand of an angel and the eye of a sage 11 In November 2019 two works by White went up for the first time in Christie s and Sotheby s main seasonal New York City contemporary art auctions Both works Banner for Willie J 1976 a portrait of White s cousin who was killed and Ye Shall Inherit the Earth 1953 a charcoal drawing of civil rights icon Rosa Lee Ingram with a babe in arms made sales records for the artist s work 34 35 36 References edit Paid Notice Deaths WHITE FRANCES BARRETT The New York Times 15 October 2000 Retrieved 17 June 2017 Charles White The Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved 2022 10 11 Acquisition Charles White National Gallery of Art April 7 2023 Retrieved April 10 2023 Artist Info www nga gov Retrieved 2022 04 18 Lopez Ruth June 5 2018 Key figure of the Chicago Black Renaissance Charles White finally gets his due The Art Newspaper Retrieved 2018 06 06 a b c d e Miller M H September 28 2018 The Man Who Taught a Generation of Black Artists Gets His Own Retrospective The New York Times Retrieved 2018 10 23 a b c d e Charles White 1913 1938 www cejjesinstitute org Archived from the original on 2020 06 08 Retrieved 2017 12 05 a b Oral history interview with Charles W White 1965 March 9 Archives of American Art Smithsonian a b c Blum Paul Von 1 December 2009 Charles White an artist for humanity s sake Journal of Pan African Studies 3 4 27 37 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 599 690 Gale A306515936 ProQuest 237007314 Sartorius Tara Cady February 1998 Art across the Curriculum Play by Play Arts amp Activities 123 1 14 16 OCLC 425236169 a b c Cotter Holland October 11 2018 Charles White Was a Giant Even Among the Heroes He Painted The New York Times Retrieved 2018 10 23 Wilson Alona C 2005 Study of Charles White International Review of African American Art 20 1 46 47 Elliot Jeffrey White Charles 1978 Charles White Portrait of an Artist Negro History Bulletin 41 3 825 828 JSTOR 44213837 a b Courage Richard A Charles White and the Black Chicago Renaissance iraaa museum hamptonu edu International Review of African American Art Hampton University Retrieved 2018 06 08 Checklist of Artworks PDF LACMA Retrieved December 14 2014 John P Murphy Charles White The Politics of Print Print Quarterly xxxvi no 2 June 2019 pp 146 56 Brock Mary Sherwood Otis Connections LA Printmaking in the 1960s Otis Connections LA Printmaking in the 1960s PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 05 28 Retrieved 2010 05 18 Thackara Tess 11 October 2018 Charles White s Artworks Made Him an Icon for Black Artists Artsy Artsy Retrieved 15 October 2018 Charles White Digital Archive NOW DIG THIS ART AND BLACK LOS ANGELES 1960 1980 Hammer Museum Retrieved 9 October 2017 Charles White ucla edu Office of Communications LACMA funding transformative renovation of Charles White Elementary School Art Gallery LAUSDdaily net LAUSD Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2017 Hocker Cliff VMFA Focus on African American Art International Review of African American Art Retrieved December 14 2014 Breanne Robertson Spring 2016 Pan Americanism Patriotism and Race Pride in Charles White s Hampton Mural American Art 30 1 52 71 doi 10 1086 686548 S2CID 163452559 Moser Joann A Graphic Master Charles White Eye Level July 14 2009 The Charles White Gallery The CEJJES Institute Ghorashi Hannah 2015 05 05 UT Austin Receives Significant Collection of Works By WPA Artist Charles White ARTnews com Retrieved 2022 01 10 Miller M H 28 September 2018 The Man Who Taught a Generation of Black Artists Gets His Own Retrospective The New York Times Charles White The Artist and the Park Unframed 12 September 2013 Duran Carrie Martin 2010 10 05 Honoring Artist Charles White s Contribution to Altadena Altadena CA Patch Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Warnecke Lauren June 15 2018 It s a homecoming for artist Charles White at the Art Institute Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2018 06 19 Norman Lee Ann June 18 2018 Poise And Dignity In Every View A Review of Charles White at the Art Institute of Chicago Newcity Art Retrieved 2018 06 19 Knight Christopher March 7 2019 Review Charles White show at LACMA pinpoints the power of an underappreciated black artist Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2019 04 03 Kennicott Philip October 18 2018 Charles White who made some of this country s greatest art transcends labels The Washington Post Retrieved October 21 2018 White should be a household name even among people who don t closely follow the art world It shouldn t be possible to tell the history of American art without White figuring squarely in the middle of it Tully Judd 2019 11 15 Abstract Expressionism Leads Sotheby s Contemporary Sale in New York with 30 1 M Willem de Kooning Topping Market Affirming 270 7 M Total ARTNews Retrieved 2019 11 15 Reyburn Scott Pogrebin Robin 15 November 2019 For Auctions It s No Froth but Steady That s the New Normal The New York Times Tully Judd 2019 11 14 At Solid 325 3 M Christie s Contemporary Art Sale in New York Ed Ruscha Is King ARTNews Retrieved 2019 11 15 Further reading editFinkelstein Sidney 1953 Charles White s Humanist Art Masses amp Mainstream Retrieved 1 August 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Finkelstein Sidney 1955 Charles White Ein Kunstler Amerikas Verlag d Kunst p 67 Retrieved 1 August 2021 The Editors of ARTnews 2018 10 26 From the Archives Reviews of Charles White s Exhibitions Over the Decades ARTnews Retrieved 2018 11 29 reviews from 1943 to 1976 that appeared in the paper Oehler Sarah Kelly Adler Esther eds 2018 Charles White A Retrospective Art Institute of Chicago ISBN 9780300232981 OCLC 1015275517 External links editCharles White in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art Charles White A Retrospective Biographical Sketch Charles White in the National Gallery of Australia s Kenneth Tyler Collection Charles White in the Minneapolis Institute or Art Minneapolis MN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles W White amp oldid 1210291510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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