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Walter H. Williams

Walter Henry Williams Jr. (1920–1998) was an African American-born artist, painter, printmaker and ceramicist who became a Danish citizen later in his life. The subjects of his artwork evolved from urban street scenes straight out of his New York upbringing to the metaphorical images of rural Black children playing in fields of sunflowers, butterflies and shacks.

Walter Henry Williams Jr.

Early life and education edit

He was born on August 11, 1920, to Walter and Louise Williams in Brooklyn, New York, one of two children.[1] His mother was a domestic worker who also painted and encouraged his interest in art.[1][2] His sister Dorothy, a year younger, would herself become an artist.[3]

His mother died of pneumonia a year after she separated from his father. The children were raised by a strict father and stepmother, and William's dream of becoming an artist faded. He escaped into a childhood dream world that would reappear later in his woodcuts.[2]

After high school, he was drafted into the Army in 1942, serving in France during World War II. He got married, had two children and worked blue-collar jobs to make a living. In 1948, he decided to pursue art and joined a group of artists and musicians, including Charlie "Bird" Parker, in Greenwich Village in New York. He shared a studio with several of the artists, some of whom like himself would eventually emigrate to Europe. They pushed him to use the GI Bill to take classes at the Brooklyn Museum School of Art. He attended the school from 1951 to 1955.[4][2][5]

Williams received a scholarship to spend a summer at the Skowegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine in 1953. He roomed with artist David Driskell, the only other African American student there, who would become a lifelong friend. Driskell, who became a well-known art historian, teacher and curator, included Williams in many of the art exhibitions he organized over the years. Williams won a first-place award for painting at Skowegan.[6][2][7][8][9][10]

In a 1976 newspaper essay chronicling the history of African American artists, renowned artist Romare Bearden described Williams as “gifted.”[11]

Evolution of his style and theme edit

Williams participated in several exhibits in the early 1950s. In 1953, he won a third prize gold medal for his painting “On the Railing” in the fourth annual exhibit for artists and students of New York City at the Harlem Branch of the YWCA. He was 32 years old, lived in Englewood, New Jersey, and was a student at the Brooklyn Museum school. The speaker at the event was artist Charles White.[12]

That same year, he participated in a group show at the Whitney Museum of American Art’s 21st annual exhibition of contemporary artists. He submitted a painting titled “Store Front Christ.” [13][14]

The next year, he had a solo exhibit at the Roko Gallery in New York. It would be the first of three shows over the ensuing years.[15][16][5]

Williams’ early paintings depicted the life of Black people in the neighborhoods and in the jazz clubs around Brooklyn and Harlem where he grew up. The titles he chose represented the life he saw: “By The El (1955),” “Store Front Christ (1953),” “Poultry Market (1953), “Untitled (Seated Man with Bowed Head) (1951),” “Untitled (Cityscape) (1954),” “Untitled (Girl on a Fire Escape) (1954)” and “Quick Nap (1952),” (girl napping on a metal apartment railing).

His use of color, his style and his subjects were influenced by Gregorio Prestopino, one of his teachers at the Brooklyn Museum school, and Williams used what he learned to illustrate the children in his colorful paintings of urban life.[2]

In 1955, he was awarded a John Hay Whitney Fellowship that he used to travel to Denmark. He chose the country because his mother's father was from the Danish West Indies, a former colony of Denmark, and had spoken to him about the country. He left for Denmark in 1956 and often visited its island of Bornholm where he saw landscapes for the first time, his second wife Marlena, a ceramicist and Danish citizen, noted.[2] The trip changed the trajectory of his works, shifting the subjects from city streets to country fields with symbolic elements that denoted rebirth and freedom.[2][15][17]

These new images of children in fields, sunflowers, butterflies, blackbirds and a bright sun appeared often in William's subsequent works, each taking on the theme of a southern landscape, the title of one of his paintings.[2][6] Driskell noted that these new works held a deeper meaning:

“A boy chases after a butterfly, he is a black boy but the color of his skin does not hinder him from being every boy in the world who seeks to know the freedom of flight. A girl picks flowers and she witnesses the sumptuous smells of a thousand perfumes and colorful dreams … In all these visionary happenings, Walter Williams makes the joy of life unending.”[2]

Williams also painted several versions of Madonna – a woodcut in 1965 and a colored pencil drawing in 1967.

He returned to the United States in 1957.

Awards and exhibitions edit

In 1958, Ebony magazine included Williams in a cover story on young Black artists.[18] In 1959, he was among the artists whose works were part of a traveling show titled “American Prints Today" sponsored by the Print Council of America. His entry was “Fighting Cock.” The exhibit was held simultaneously in eight U.S. cities.[19][20] He also received a grant from the National Institute of Arts & Letters in 1960.[18][21]

Williams spent the next decades in and out of the United States. From 1959 to 1963, he traveled and painted in Mexico, showing his works in several exhibitions, including at the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City. He told a Mexican reporter that “freedom from racial prejudice was essential” for him to develop as a person and an artist, an atmosphere he found in Mexico but not his native America.[22][23] He returned to the United States but stayed for only a year.

In 1963, he received the $100 Perkin-Elmer prize for an oil painting in the Silvermine Guild of Artists annual competition.[24] A year later, he returned to Copenhagen, where he curated an exhibit for expatriate artists titled “Ten American Negro Artists Living and Working in Europe.” The other artists featured were Harvey Cropper, Beauford Delaney, Herbert Gentry, Arthur Hardie, Clifford Jackson, Sam Middleton, Earl Miller, Norma Morgan and Larry Potter.[22][2]

During his time abroad, Williams was represented in a number of exhibitions in foreign cities: Copenhagen, 1956 and 1957; Mexico City, 1963; Stockholm, 1965, and Sydney, Australia, 1965.[16]

He was back in the United States in 1965 when his print “Girl with Butterflies #2” was purchased by the Smithsonian Institution for the Executive Wing of the White House under President Lyndon Johnson.[22] The woodcut print was reproduced for the 1966 UNICEF calendar.[2][25][26] He also exhibited at the Golden Door Gallery in New Hope, Pennsylvania.[27]

Driskell tapped him to become an artist-in-residence in Fisk University’s Art Department in Nashville, where Driskell was chair.[6][28][3] Williams was among six artists that Driskell hired to help build the department. Williams' wife Marlena accompanied him, and they set up a studio. He had developed an interest in pottery, and taught classes in this medium as well as painting and printmaking. He remained at Fisk for the 1968–1969 school year.[7]

“I have only tried to teach the student that in painting today anything goes if the artist can make it work,” he told a reporter. “By making it work I mean making it a complete work within itself.”[28]

The year before Williams began his residency, Driskell organized a two-man show for him as part of Fisk's 38th annual Festival of Music and Art in 1967.[29][30] During his stay, his works were shown at the university, the Louisville (KY) Art Workshop (where most of the works were his woodcuts), the Parthenon (Nashville), Brooks Memorial Art Gallery (Memphis), Jackson (MS) State University, Studio 22 (Chicago), Lee Nordness Galleries (NY), Mount Holyoke College (MA) and Stephens College (MO).[28][25][7][31][32][33]

In 1969, he was among 10 African American artists who exhibited at Mount Holyoke College in Hadley, MA. It was the first of its kind show for the university. Williams chartered a bus to the exhibition.[34][33] Fifty years later, in 2019, the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum hosted an exhibition of works on loan from the collection of the David C. Driskell Center at the University of Maryland in College Park. Williams’ painting “Southern Landscape” was among them.[35][36]

At the end of his residency at Fisk, he assembled a farewell exhibit of his paintings, color woodcuts and pottery at the school. in 1969, he and Marlena returned to Denmark, where he continued to work and also taught in his studio in Frederiksberg.[28][2] Williams became a Danish citizen in 1979, giving up his U.S. citizenship.[2]

In 1979, Williams wrote a note to Driskell stating that he was preparing some works to submit to the Studio Museum in Harlem for an upcoming show titled “An Ocean Apart: American Artists Abroad.”[37] The show opened in 1982 and included works by Williams, Herbert Gentry, Sam Middleton and Clifford Jackson.[38][39][40] The theme mimicked the exhibit Williams had mounted about a decade earlier.

One newspaper story noted that all had gained recognition in Europe before being acknowledged in the United States.[41] One newspaper columnist mentioned that Gentry, Middleton and Jackson spoke about their work and experiences to a large audience at the show, but the article made no mention of Williams.[40]

Williams' works are in many private collections. Nelson Rockefeller's was one of them. He owned the print “Harvest” until it was sold at auction in 2019 at Sotheby’s.[29][42]

In 1973, Williams sent Driskell a catalog from a show in Copenhagen for which Driskell had written the introduction. A year earlier, Driskell had visited him in Denmark. Driskell related to a reporter what Williams had told him about his artwork:

“All my life I have been painting one picture. It is one that reflects my own image and the inner thoughts of my mind. I feel the naivete of a child when I paint yet I have the passions of the father that I am. I am an artist who is full of love for the world and all the images it holds.”[2]

A devastating fire in 1980 destroyed Williams' studio, and all of his paintings and prints were lost. Depressed, he was unable to work for several months. Three years later, he stopped creating art altogether. The last exhibition he attended was the International Art Fair in Tokyo in 1985, where he represented Denmark.[2]

Personal life edit

In 1964, he married Marlena Jacobsen and they had a son. Williams died of liver cancer on June 13, 1998.[2]

Collections edit

Metropolitan Museum of Art [43]

Brooklyn Museum of Art[44]

Whitney Museum of American Art[45][2]

National Gallery of Art [28][46]

Cincinnati Art Museum [28][47]

Riverside Museum of Art, NY [28]

Philadelphia Museum of Art[28][48]

The Studio Museum in Harlem [49]

Georgia Museum of Art [28][50]

Smithsonian American Art Museum [28][51]

David C. Driskell Center [35][36][6]

The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art[52]

Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African-American Art [53]

Baltimore Museum of Art[54]

The White House, National Collection of Fine Arts [22][2][51]

Mexican American Institute, Mexico City [16][2]

Howard University Gallery of Art [21][2]

Fisk University Galleries [21]

Middlebury College Museum of Art[55]

Selected exhibitions edit

YWCA, Harlem Branch, 1953[12]

Whitney Museum of American Art, 1953, 1955, 1958, 1963[15][13][16]

Oklahoma Art Center, 1958[56]

Roko Gallery, 1954, 1962, 1963 [16][15]

Instituto Nacional de Dellas Artes, Mexico, 1958 [16]

Texas Southern University, 1962 [16]

Brooklyn Museum of Art, 1963 [16]

Fairleigh Dickinson University, 1964[57]

Musee d’art et d’histoire, Geneva 1965 [16]

Golden Door Gallery, New Hope, PA, 1966[27]

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1966[16]

College of Mount St. Joseph's, 1967[58]

Fisk University, 1967, 1968, 1975, 2019 [29][7][6][59]

Cornell University, 1967 [60]

The Parthenon, Nashville, 1967 [28][29]

Louisville Art Workshop, 1969 [25]

Studio 22, Chicago, 1969 [31]

American Wind Symphony Orchestra Barge, Pittsburgh, 1969[61][62]

Lee Nordness Galleries, NY, 1969 [32]

Mount Holyoke College, 1969[33]

Brooks Memorial Arts Gallery, Memphis[28]

Jackson (MS) State College, 1969 [16][28]

Stephens College, Missouri, 1968 [16]  [28]

Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1969, 2014 [28][63]  [64]

Hudson River Museum, 1970 [65]

Davenport Municipal Art Gallery, 1970[66][67]

Cheekwood Estate and Gardens, Nashville, 1971 [68]

National Armory, Wilmington, DE, 1971[6]

Art Consortium, Cincinnati, 1979 [69]

Studio Museum of Harlem, 1982 [40][41][38]

New Orleans Museum of Art, 1984[70]

Kenkeleba House, 1986[71]

Glatt House Gallery, Salem, OR, 1991[72]

M. Hanks Gallery, 2004[73]

Baltimore Museum of Art, 2015[74]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Walter Williams". U.S. Census. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Hanks, Eric (2007). "A Child of the Universe…Speak Like a Child: Mildred Thompson and Walter Williams". International Review of African American Art. 21 (2): 12–31.
  3. ^ a b Tapley, Mel (17 November 1973). "About The Arts". New York Amsterdam News. p. D16. ProQuest 226600721.
  4. ^ Walter Williams Exhibition. Texas Southern University. 1962.[page needed][ISBN missing]
  5. ^ a b "A Painter Looks Back". New York Amsterdam News. 15 November 1980. p. A12. ProQuest 226548548.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Afro-American Images 1971: The Vision of Percy Ricks. Delaware Art Museum. 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d Hieronymus, Clara (1975-03-09). "Art and Theater (column)". The Tennessean (Nasville). via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  8. ^ "New Orleans Artists Participate in Exhibit". The Crowley Post-Signal (LA). via newspapers.com. 1984-08-09. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  9. ^ Tapley, Mel (5 July 1986). "Kenkeleba House's 'Unbroken Circle'; Rich, monumental exhibition". New York Amsterdam News. p. 21. ProQuest 226389122.
  10. ^ Wilder, Charlotte (2017). "Few Maine Artists Can Touch the Legacy of David Driskell". DownEast. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  11. ^ Bearden, Romare (26 June 1976). "The Black Man In The Arts". New York Amsterdam News. p. C7a. ProQuest 226514651.
  12. ^ a b "Award Prizes At YWCA Art Exhibition". New York Amsterdam News. 2 May 1953. p. 4. ProQuest 225721360.
  13. ^ a b "WORK ON EXHIBIT: Painting by Marin, Williams Put on Display at Museum". The Record (Hackensack, NJ). via newspapers.com. 1953-10-19. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  14. ^ 1953 Annual exhibition of contemporary American painting. Whitney Museum of American Art. 1953. p. 25.
  15. ^ a b c d "Walter Williams". Alexandre Gallery. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cederholm, Theresa Dickason (1973). Afro-American Artists; a Bio-bibliographical Directory. Trustees of the Boston Public Library. ISBN 978-0-89073-007-2.[page needed]
  17. ^ Whitmire, Ethelene (1978). "Landscapes of the African American Diaspora in Denmark – An Imaginary Exhibition" (PDF). Danish Museum. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  18. ^ a b "Walter H. Williams". Artnet. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  19. ^ "Art Museum Print Show". The Philadelphia Inquirer. via newspapers.com. 1959-09-20. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  20. ^ Dover, Cedric (1960). American Negro Art.
  21. ^ a b c "Walter Henry Williams". askArt. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  22. ^ a b c d "Walter H. Williams". African American Registry. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  23. ^ Preston, Stuart (1954). "The Point of View". The New York Times.
  24. ^ "Top Silvermine Prize Goes to Herman Maril". Bridgeport Post (CT). via newspapers.com. 1963-06-23. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  25. ^ a b c "Fisk Faculty Show is at Workshop". The Courier-Journal (Louisville, KY). via newspapers.com. 1969-01-26. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  26. ^ Miller, Jane (25 May 1966). Nature, Man and the Young Reader (Thesis).
  27. ^ a b "Calendar of Art Events in Phila. Area". The Philadelphia Inquirer. via newspapers.com. 1966-12-04. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hieronymus, Clara (1969-06-15). "'Anything Goes" in Painting Today". The Tennessean (Nashville). via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  29. ^ a b c d "What to See". The Tennessean (Nashville). via newspapers.com. 1967-04-23. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  30. ^ "David Driskell: The African and Afro-American Series". Bowdoin College Museum of Art. 1967. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  31. ^ a b "Studio's 22 Has March Exhibition". Chicago Daily Defender. 22 March 1969. p. 2. ProQuest 493528838.
  32. ^ a b "12 Black Artists' Exhibit Aids NAACP". New York Amsterdam News. 1 February 1969. p. 38. ProQuest 226737167.
  33. ^ a b c "Art exhibition at Mt. Holyoke". Afro-American. 8 November 1969. p. 14. ProQuest 532219766.
  34. ^ Sheppard, Daphne (1 November 1969). "Kings Diary". New York Amsterdam News. p. 26. ProQuest 226600371.
  35. ^ a b "Special Loans from the David C. Driskell Center". Mount Holyoke College Art museum. 2019. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  36. ^ a b "Music and Art: Removing Our Rose-Colored Glasses". Mount Holyoke College Art Museum. 2019. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  37. ^ . The David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the Visual Arts and Culture of African Americans and the African Diaspora. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020.
  38. ^ a b Wallach, Amei (1982-10-17). "Native Sons Who Left to Thrive". Newsday. via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  39. ^ "Art Exhibits and Black Role". New York Daily News. via newspapers.com. 1982-10-14. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  40. ^ a b c Tapley, Mel (6 November 1982). "About the Arts". New York Amsterdam News. p. 27. ProQuest 226470558.
  41. ^ a b shepard, Joan (1982-10-14). "Art Exhibits and Black Role". New York Daily News. via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  42. ^ "Walter Williams: Harvest". Sotheby's. 2019. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  43. ^ "By The El – Walter Williams". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  44. ^ "Sundown – Walter H. Williams". Brooklyn Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  45. ^ "Walter Williams – 1920–1998". Whitney Museum of American Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  46. ^ "Walter Williams". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  47. ^ "Museums for Walter Henry Williams". askART. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  48. ^ "Boy with Sunflowers". Philadelphia Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  49. ^ "Walter Williams". The Studio Museum in Harlem. 10 September 2020. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  50. ^ "Walter Williams". Georgia Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  51. ^ a b "Walter Williams". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  52. ^ "Walter Williams". The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  53. ^ "Walter Williams". Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African-American Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  54. ^ "A Quick Nap – Walter Henry Williams". Baltimore Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  55. ^ "Walter H. Williams, Jr., Untitled (Seated Man with Bowed Head)". Middlebury College Museum of Art. 6 January 2020.
  56. ^ "Three New Exhibits Open Today". Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City). via newspapers.com. 1958-02-09. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  57. ^ "'Some Negro Artists' Exhibition Opens at Fairleigh Dickinson". Daily Register (Red Bank, NJ). via newspapers.com. 1964-10-22. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  58. ^ Findsen, Owen (1970-03-01). "Black Artists Exhibit". Cincinnati Enquirer. via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  59. ^ "Black History Month: Art at Fisk University Galleries". Post News Group. 2019-02-26. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  60. ^ Gibian, Cay (1967-03-01). "Negro Artists". Ithaca (NY) Journal. via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  61. ^ Kienzle, Connie (1969-06-18). "Point Sticks to Simple Plot". Pittsburgh Press. via newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  62. ^ "Art Exhibit to Close". New Pittsburgh Courier. 19 July 1969. p. 10. ProQuest 202518893.
  63. ^ McElroy, Guy C. (1989). African-American Artists, 1880-1987: Selections from the Evans-Tibbs Collection. Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. ISBN 978-0-295-96837-7.[page needed]
  64. ^ "Black American Artists". The Gazette (Cedar Rapids, IA). via newspapers.com. 1969-09-03. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  65. ^ West, Chester (14 March 1970). "What's Happening In Westchester". New York Amsterdam News. p. 30. ProQuest 226636689.
  66. ^ "Davenport Municipal Art Gallery Group Exhibit". Quad City Times (Davenport, IA). via newspapers.com. 1970-08-28. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  67. ^ "African American Art at Municipal Gallery". The Rock Island Argus (IL). via newspapers.com. 1970-08-08. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  68. ^ "Contemporary American Black Artists". The Tennessean (Nashville). via newspapers.com. 1971-01-03. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  69. ^ "Art Notes: Arts Consortium". Cincinnati Enquirer. via newspapers.com. 1979-02-11. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  70. ^ "New Orleans Artists Participate in Exhibit". Crowley Post-Signal (LA). via newspapers.com. 1984-08-09. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  71. ^ Tapley, Mel (5 July 1986). "Kenkeleba House's 'Unbroken Circle'; Rich, monumental exhibition". New York Amsterdam News. p. 21. ProQuest 226389122.
  72. ^ "Art (column)". Statesman Journal (OR). via newspapers.com. 1991-07-26. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  73. ^ "M. Hanks Gallery (Santa Monica, CA) – Walter Williams exhibit and catalogue introduction". David C. Driskell Center. 2004. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  74. ^ "BMA's Imagining Home Exhibition Explores Different Aspects of Home Through Art From Around the World". Baltimore Museum of Art. 2015. Retrieved 2022-01-19.

walter, williams, walter, henry, williams, 1920, 1998, african, american, born, artist, painter, printmaker, ceramicist, became, danish, citizen, later, life, subjects, artwork, evolved, from, urban, street, scenes, straight, york, upbringing, metaphorical, im. Walter Henry Williams Jr 1920 1998 was an African American born artist painter printmaker and ceramicist who became a Danish citizen later in his life The subjects of his artwork evolved from urban street scenes straight out of his New York upbringing to the metaphorical images of rural Black children playing in fields of sunflowers butterflies and shacks Walter Henry Williams Jr Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Evolution of his style and theme 3 Awards and exhibitions 4 Personal life 5 Collections 6 Selected exhibitions 7 ReferencesEarly life and education editHe was born on August 11 1920 to Walter and Louise Williams in Brooklyn New York one of two children 1 His mother was a domestic worker who also painted and encouraged his interest in art 1 2 His sister Dorothy a year younger would herself become an artist 3 His mother died of pneumonia a year after she separated from his father The children were raised by a strict father and stepmother and William s dream of becoming an artist faded He escaped into a childhood dream world that would reappear later in his woodcuts 2 After high school he was drafted into the Army in 1942 serving in France during World War II He got married had two children and worked blue collar jobs to make a living In 1948 he decided to pursue art and joined a group of artists and musicians including Charlie Bird Parker in Greenwich Village in New York He shared a studio with several of the artists some of whom like himself would eventually emigrate to Europe They pushed him to use the GI Bill to take classes at the Brooklyn Museum School of Art He attended the school from 1951 to 1955 4 2 5 Williams received a scholarship to spend a summer at the Skowegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine in 1953 He roomed with artist David Driskell the only other African American student there who would become a lifelong friend Driskell who became a well known art historian teacher and curator included Williams in many of the art exhibitions he organized over the years Williams won a first place award for painting at Skowegan 6 2 7 8 9 10 In a 1976 newspaper essay chronicling the history of African American artists renowned artist Romare Bearden described Williams as gifted 11 Evolution of his style and theme editWilliams participated in several exhibits in the early 1950s In 1953 he won a third prize gold medal for his painting On the Railing in the fourth annual exhibit for artists and students of New York City at the Harlem Branch of the YWCA He was 32 years old lived in Englewood New Jersey and was a student at the Brooklyn Museum school The speaker at the event was artist Charles White 12 That same year he participated in a group show at the Whitney Museum of American Art s 21st annual exhibition of contemporary artists He submitted a painting titled Store Front Christ 13 14 The next year he had a solo exhibit at the Roko Gallery in New York It would be the first of three shows over the ensuing years 15 16 5 Williams early paintings depicted the life of Black people in the neighborhoods and in the jazz clubs around Brooklyn and Harlem where he grew up The titles he chose represented the life he saw By The El 1955 Store Front Christ 1953 Poultry Market 1953 Untitled Seated Man with Bowed Head 1951 Untitled Cityscape 1954 Untitled Girl on a Fire Escape 1954 and Quick Nap 1952 girl napping on a metal apartment railing His use of color his style and his subjects were influenced by Gregorio Prestopino one of his teachers at the Brooklyn Museum school and Williams used what he learned to illustrate the children in his colorful paintings of urban life 2 In 1955 he was awarded a John Hay Whitney Fellowship that he used to travel to Denmark He chose the country because his mother s father was from the Danish West Indies a former colony of Denmark and had spoken to him about the country He left for Denmark in 1956 and often visited its island of Bornholm where he saw landscapes for the first time his second wife Marlena a ceramicist and Danish citizen noted 2 The trip changed the trajectory of his works shifting the subjects from city streets to country fields with symbolic elements that denoted rebirth and freedom 2 15 17 These new images of children in fields sunflowers butterflies blackbirds and a bright sun appeared often in William s subsequent works each taking on the theme of a southern landscape the title of one of his paintings 2 6 Driskell noted that these new works held a deeper meaning A boy chases after a butterfly he is a black boy but the color of his skin does not hinder him from being every boy in the world who seeks to know the freedom of flight A girl picks flowers and she witnesses the sumptuous smells of a thousand perfumes and colorful dreams In all these visionary happenings Walter Williams makes the joy of life unending 2 Williams also painted several versions of Madonna a woodcut in 1965 and a colored pencil drawing in 1967 He returned to the United States in 1957 Awards and exhibitions editIn 1958 Ebony magazine included Williams in a cover story on young Black artists 18 In 1959 he was among the artists whose works were part of a traveling show titled American Prints Today sponsored by the Print Council of America His entry was Fighting Cock The exhibit was held simultaneously in eight U S cities 19 20 He also received a grant from the National Institute of Arts amp Letters in 1960 18 21 Williams spent the next decades in and out of the United States From 1959 to 1963 he traveled and painted in Mexico showing his works in several exhibitions including at the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City He told a Mexican reporter that freedom from racial prejudice was essential for him to develop as a person and an artist an atmosphere he found in Mexico but not his native America 22 23 He returned to the United States but stayed for only a year In 1963 he received the 100 Perkin Elmer prize for an oil painting in the Silvermine Guild of Artists annual competition 24 A year later he returned to Copenhagen where he curated an exhibit for expatriate artists titled Ten American Negro Artists Living and Working in Europe The other artists featured were Harvey Cropper Beauford Delaney Herbert Gentry Arthur Hardie Clifford Jackson Sam Middleton Earl Miller Norma Morgan and Larry Potter 22 2 During his time abroad Williams was represented in a number of exhibitions in foreign cities Copenhagen 1956 and 1957 Mexico City 1963 Stockholm 1965 and Sydney Australia 1965 16 He was back in the United States in 1965 when his print Girl with Butterflies 2 was purchased by the Smithsonian Institution for the Executive Wing of the White House under President Lyndon Johnson 22 The woodcut print was reproduced for the 1966 UNICEF calendar 2 25 26 He also exhibited at the Golden Door Gallery in New Hope Pennsylvania 27 Driskell tapped him to become an artist in residence in Fisk University s Art Department in Nashville where Driskell was chair 6 28 3 Williams was among six artists that Driskell hired to help build the department Williams wife Marlena accompanied him and they set up a studio He had developed an interest in pottery and taught classes in this medium as well as painting and printmaking He remained at Fisk for the 1968 1969 school year 7 I have only tried to teach the student that in painting today anything goes if the artist can make it work he told a reporter By making it work I mean making it a complete work within itself 28 The year before Williams began his residency Driskell organized a two man show for him as part of Fisk s 38th annual Festival of Music and Art in 1967 29 30 During his stay his works were shown at the university the Louisville KY Art Workshop where most of the works were his woodcuts the Parthenon Nashville Brooks Memorial Art Gallery Memphis Jackson MS State University Studio 22 Chicago Lee Nordness Galleries NY Mount Holyoke College MA and Stephens College MO 28 25 7 31 32 33 In 1969 he was among 10 African American artists who exhibited at Mount Holyoke College in Hadley MA It was the first of its kind show for the university Williams chartered a bus to the exhibition 34 33 Fifty years later in 2019 the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum hosted an exhibition of works on loan from the collection of the David C Driskell Center at the University of Maryland in College Park Williams painting Southern Landscape was among them 35 36 At the end of his residency at Fisk he assembled a farewell exhibit of his paintings color woodcuts and pottery at the school in 1969 he and Marlena returned to Denmark where he continued to work and also taught in his studio in Frederiksberg 28 2 Williams became a Danish citizen in 1979 giving up his U S citizenship 2 In 1979 Williams wrote a note to Driskell stating that he was preparing some works to submit to the Studio Museum in Harlem for an upcoming show titled An Ocean Apart American Artists Abroad 37 The show opened in 1982 and included works by Williams Herbert Gentry Sam Middleton and Clifford Jackson 38 39 40 The theme mimicked the exhibit Williams had mounted about a decade earlier One newspaper story noted that all had gained recognition in Europe before being acknowledged in the United States 41 One newspaper columnist mentioned that Gentry Middleton and Jackson spoke about their work and experiences to a large audience at the show but the article made no mention of Williams 40 Williams works are in many private collections Nelson Rockefeller s was one of them He owned the print Harvest until it was sold at auction in 2019 at Sotheby s 29 42 In 1973 Williams sent Driskell a catalog from a show in Copenhagen for which Driskell had written the introduction A year earlier Driskell had visited him in Denmark Driskell related to a reporter what Williams had told him about his artwork All my life I have been painting one picture It is one that reflects my own image and the inner thoughts of my mind I feel the naivete of a child when I paint yet I have the passions of the father that I am I am an artist who is full of love for the world and all the images it holds 2 A devastating fire in 1980 destroyed Williams studio and all of his paintings and prints were lost Depressed he was unable to work for several months Three years later he stopped creating art altogether The last exhibition he attended was the International Art Fair in Tokyo in 1985 where he represented Denmark 2 Personal life editIn 1964 he married Marlena Jacobsen and they had a son Williams died of liver cancer on June 13 1998 2 Collections editMetropolitan Museum of Art 43 Brooklyn Museum of Art 44 Whitney Museum of American Art 45 2 National Gallery of Art 28 46 Cincinnati Art Museum 28 47 Riverside Museum of Art NY 28 Philadelphia Museum of Art 28 48 The Studio Museum in Harlem 49 Georgia Museum of Art 28 50 Smithsonian American Art Museum 28 51 David C Driskell Center 35 36 6 The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art 52 Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African American Art 53 Baltimore Museum of Art 54 The White House National Collection of Fine Arts 22 2 51 Mexican American Institute Mexico City 16 2 Howard University Gallery of Art 21 2 Fisk University Galleries 21 Middlebury College Museum of Art 55 Selected exhibitions editYWCA Harlem Branch 1953 12 Whitney Museum of American Art 1953 1955 1958 1963 15 13 16 Oklahoma Art Center 1958 56 Roko Gallery 1954 1962 1963 16 15 Instituto Nacional de Dellas Artes Mexico 1958 16 Texas Southern University 1962 16 Brooklyn Museum of Art 1963 16 Fairleigh Dickinson University 1964 57 Musee d art et d histoire Geneva 1965 16 Golden Door Gallery New Hope PA 1966 27 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 1966 16 College of Mount St Joseph s 1967 58 Fisk University 1967 1968 1975 2019 29 7 6 59 Cornell University 1967 60 The Parthenon Nashville 1967 28 29 Louisville Art Workshop 1969 25 Studio 22 Chicago 1969 31 American Wind Symphony Orchestra Barge Pittsburgh 1969 61 62 Lee Nordness Galleries NY 1969 32 Mount Holyoke College 1969 33 Brooks Memorial Arts Gallery Memphis 28 Jackson MS State College 1969 16 28 Stephens College Missouri 1968 16 28 Smithsonian American Art Museum 1969 2014 28 63 64 Hudson River Museum 1970 65 Davenport Municipal Art Gallery 1970 66 67 Cheekwood Estate and Gardens Nashville 1971 68 National Armory Wilmington DE 1971 6 Art Consortium Cincinnati 1979 69 Studio Museum of Harlem 1982 40 41 38 New Orleans Museum of Art 1984 70 Kenkeleba House 1986 71 Glatt House Gallery Salem OR 1991 72 M Hanks Gallery 2004 73 Baltimore Museum of Art 2015 74 References edit a b Walter Williams U S Census Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Hanks Eric 2007 A Child of the Universe Speak Like a Child Mildred Thompson and Walter Williams International Review of African American Art 21 2 12 31 a b Tapley Mel 17 November 1973 About The Arts New York Amsterdam News p D16 ProQuest 226600721 Walter Williams Exhibition Texas Southern University 1962 page needed ISBN missing a b A Painter Looks Back New York Amsterdam News 15 November 1980 p A12 ProQuest 226548548 a b c d e f Afro American Images 1971 The Vision of Percy Ricks Delaware Art Museum 2021 a b c d Hieronymus Clara 1975 03 09 Art and Theater column The Tennessean Nasville via newspapers com Retrieved 2021 01 19 New Orleans Artists Participate in Exhibit The Crowley Post Signal LA via newspapers com 1984 08 09 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Tapley Mel 5 July 1986 Kenkeleba House s Unbroken Circle Rich monumental exhibition New York Amsterdam News p 21 ProQuest 226389122 Wilder Charlotte 2017 Few Maine Artists Can Touch the Legacy of David Driskell DownEast Retrieved 2022 01 19 Bearden Romare 26 June 1976 The Black Man In The Arts New York Amsterdam News p C7a ProQuest 226514651 a b Award Prizes At YWCA Art Exhibition New York Amsterdam News 2 May 1953 p 4 ProQuest 225721360 a b WORK ON EXHIBIT Painting by Marin Williams Put on Display at Museum The Record Hackensack NJ via newspapers com 1953 10 19 Retrieved 2022 01 19 1953 Annual exhibition of contemporary American painting Whitney Museum of American Art 1953 p 25 a b c d Walter Williams Alexandre Gallery Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l Cederholm Theresa Dickason 1973 Afro American Artists a Bio bibliographical Directory Trustees of the Boston Public Library ISBN 978 0 89073 007 2 page needed Whitmire Ethelene 1978 Landscapes of the African American Diaspora in Denmark An Imaginary Exhibition PDF Danish Museum Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b Walter H Williams Artnet Retrieved 2022 01 19 Art Museum Print Show The Philadelphia Inquirer via newspapers com 1959 09 20 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Dover Cedric 1960 American Negro Art a b c Walter Henry Williams askArt Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c d Walter H Williams African American Registry Retrieved 2022 01 19 Preston Stuart 1954 The Point of View The New York Times Top Silvermine Prize Goes to Herman Maril Bridgeport Post CT via newspapers com 1963 06 23 Retrieved 2022 01 12 a b c Fisk Faculty Show is at Workshop The Courier Journal Louisville KY via newspapers com 1969 01 26 Retrieved 2022 01 10 Miller Jane 25 May 1966 Nature Man and the Young Reader Thesis a b Calendar of Art Events in Phila Area The Philadelphia Inquirer via newspapers com 1966 12 04 Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hieronymus Clara 1969 06 15 Anything Goes in Painting Today The Tennessean Nashville via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c d What to See The Tennessean Nashville via newspapers com 1967 04 23 Retrieved 2022 01 19 David Driskell The African and Afro American Series Bowdoin College Museum of Art 1967 Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b Studio s 22 Has March Exhibition Chicago Daily Defender 22 March 1969 p 2 ProQuest 493528838 a b 12 Black Artists Exhibit Aids NAACP New York Amsterdam News 1 February 1969 p 38 ProQuest 226737167 a b c Art exhibition at Mt Holyoke Afro American 8 November 1969 p 14 ProQuest 532219766 Sheppard Daphne 1 November 1969 Kings Diary New York Amsterdam News p 26 ProQuest 226600371 a b Special Loans from the David C Driskell Center Mount Holyoke College Art museum 2019 Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b Music and Art Removing Our Rose Colored Glasses Mount Holyoke College Art Museum 2019 Retrieved 2022 01 19 The David C Driskell Papers The 1970s The David C Driskell Center for the Study of the Visual Arts and Culture of African Americans and the African Diaspora Archived from the original on 20 October 2020 a b Wallach Amei 1982 10 17 Native Sons Who Left to Thrive Newsday via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 Art Exhibits and Black Role New York Daily News via newspapers com 1982 10 14 Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b c Tapley Mel 6 November 1982 About the Arts New York Amsterdam News p 27 ProQuest 226470558 a b shepard Joan 1982 10 14 Art Exhibits and Black Role New York Daily News via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams Harvest Sotheby s 2019 Retrieved 2022 01 19 By The El Walter Williams Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Sundown Walter H Williams Brooklyn Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams 1920 1998 Whitney Museum of American Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams National Gallery of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Museums for Walter Henry Williams askART Retrieved 2022 01 19 Boy with Sunflowers Philadelphia Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams The Studio Museum in Harlem 10 September 2020 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams Georgia Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 a b Walter Williams Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter Williams Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African American Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 A Quick Nap Walter Henry Williams Baltimore Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 01 19 Walter H Williams Jr Untitled Seated Man with Bowed Head Middlebury College Museum of Art 6 January 2020 Three New Exhibits Open Today Daily Oklahoman Oklahoma City via newspapers com 1958 02 09 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Some Negro Artists Exhibition Opens at Fairleigh Dickinson Daily Register Red Bank NJ via newspapers com 1964 10 22 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Findsen Owen 1970 03 01 Black Artists Exhibit Cincinnati Enquirer via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 Black History Month Art at Fisk University Galleries Post News Group 2019 02 26 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Gibian Cay 1967 03 01 Negro Artists Ithaca NY Journal via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 Kienzle Connie 1969 06 18 Point Sticks to Simple Plot Pittsburgh Press via newspapers com Retrieved 2022 01 19 Art Exhibit to Close New Pittsburgh Courier 19 July 1969 p 10 ProQuest 202518893 McElroy Guy C 1989 African American Artists 1880 1987 Selections from the Evans Tibbs Collection Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service ISBN 978 0 295 96837 7 page needed Black American Artists The Gazette Cedar Rapids IA via newspapers com 1969 09 03 Retrieved 2022 01 19 West Chester 14 March 1970 What s Happening In Westchester New York Amsterdam News p 30 ProQuest 226636689 Davenport Municipal Art Gallery Group Exhibit Quad City Times Davenport IA via newspapers com 1970 08 28 Retrieved 2022 01 19 African American Art at Municipal Gallery The Rock Island Argus IL via newspapers com 1970 08 08 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Contemporary American Black Artists The Tennessean Nashville via newspapers com 1971 01 03 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Art Notes Arts Consortium Cincinnati Enquirer via newspapers com 1979 02 11 Retrieved 2022 01 19 New Orleans Artists Participate in Exhibit Crowley Post Signal LA via newspapers com 1984 08 09 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Tapley Mel 5 July 1986 Kenkeleba House s Unbroken Circle Rich monumental exhibition New York Amsterdam News p 21 ProQuest 226389122 Art column Statesman Journal OR via newspapers com 1991 07 26 Retrieved 2022 01 19 M Hanks Gallery Santa Monica CA Walter Williams exhibit and catalogue introduction David C Driskell Center 2004 Retrieved 2022 01 19 BMA s Imagining Home Exhibition Explores Different Aspects of Home Through Art From Around the World Baltimore Museum of Art 2015 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter H Williams amp oldid 1202839171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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