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Whitfield Lovell

Whitfield Lovell (born October 2, 1959) is a contemporary African-American artist who is known primarily for his drawings of African-American individuals from the first half of the 20th century. Lovell creates these drawings in pencil, oil stick, or charcoal on paper, wood, or directly on walls. In his most recent work, these drawings are paired with found objects that Lovell collects at flea markets and antique shops.

Whitfield Lovell
Born (1959-10-02) October 2, 1959 (age 64)
Bronx, New York, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
EducationThe High School of Music and Art
Manhattanville College
Maryland Institute College of Art
Parsons School of Design
Alma materCooper Union
New York University

Early career edit

Born October 2, 1959 in the Bronx, New York to Gladys Glover Lovell, an elementary school teacher from South Carolina, and Allister Lovell, a postal clerk and photographer of West Indian descent.[1] Whitfield Lovell grew up in the Bronx and attended The High School of Music and Art in Manhattan. During high school, he also participated in a variety of extracurricular art programs: the Metropolitan Museum of Art High School Program, the Whitney Museum Art Resources Center, the New York State Summer School for the Arts in Fredonia, New York, and the Cooper Union Saturday Program.[2]

In 1977, Lovell traveled to Spain to study painting and sculpture with Manhattanville College. At El Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain, he decided that he would become a painter. Lovell has said:

"I knew I would go into some form of art, but I wasn't sure which. I was interested in fashion and advertising as options. But while I was standing in front of a Velasquez painting I had an amazing spiritual experience. The painter had communicated with me through centuries and cultures, and I suddenly understood the role of the artist. I ran from room to room. Goya, El Greco, Reubens, and Picasso all began to speak out to me. Whatever they were doing in those rooms was what I wanted to do with my life."[3]

Lovell spent a year at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), Baltimore in 1977 before traveling in France, Germany, Italy, England, Austria and the Netherlands with the American Institute For Foreign Study in 1978. When he returned to New York, he enrolled in the Fine Arts Department of the Parsons School of Design and then The Cooper Union School of Art, from which he graduated in 1981.[1][4] In 1982, Lovell traveled to Egypt, Nigeria, and the Republic of Benin, West Africa.

In 1985, Lovell attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, where he reconsidered the nature of his own work:

"In Skowhegan I had time to really think about what I wanted to do with my work. I felt the formal issues about color were fighting with the narratives I was getting at ... So I narrowed down the color, and began to work monochromatically. I had all of my father's old photographs mailed to me, and I began a process of looking through these images each day before starting to work. The work became more personal and a reflection of the way I saw myself as an artist."[5]

This practice, using old photographs as inspiration and source material, has stayed with Whitfield to this day.

In 1986, Lovell stayed with relatives in Barbados, West Indies. In 1989, he attended New York University (NYU) Graduate Program in Venice, Italy. In 1990, he traveled to Mexico, where he began collecting ex-votos and retablos, which he cited as influences in his work.

"After looking at European paintings for so many years and then the great black painters Jacob Lawrence, Bob Thompson, and Horace Pippin, I looked toward other cultures for inspiration. I found myself more attracted to folk art, which wasn't as concerned with making high art, but with the joy of storytelling. My training, however, was heavily steeped in European artistic values; even the earlier pieces, which had more modernist notions in them, really did come from that tradition. So I also found artists from Latin America to be a very refreshing discovery for me. They seemed to fuse European colonial styles with a different sensibility. I felt they were more passionate about the religious and social narratives and less concerned with skill. Although I didn't grow up Catholic, I was attracted to that symbolism and to certain decorative elements that I feel are part of many images one sees growing up in a place like the Bronx. Rather than return to Venice to finish my master's degree, I spent a lot of time in Mexico getting an education of a different sort."[6]

In 1994, Lovell's work was shown as part of the American contingent at the IV Bienal Internacional de Pintura en Cuenca, Ecuador. Other American artists exhibiting at this show were Donald Locke, Philemona Williamson, Freddy Rodríguez and Emilio Cruz.[7]

Installations edit

In 1993, Lovell visited a private artist's retreat at the Villa Val Lemme in Capriatta d'Orba, Italy. The villa had been built by a slave trader in the early 20th century.

"There were grotesque paintings of Africans with nose rings lining the ceilings of some of the rooms. Also, the coat of arms on the front of the building had an African face on it, and a few very elderly locals could apparently remember the blacks who had lived there. The slaver had obviously continued to trade long after it had become illegal, but that was not unheard of in some other countries. It was hard to ignore the background of the place. Ordinarily the experience of being somewhere new would have fermented over time and then become a piece much later. That's how I was used to working. But in this case, I later realized, it was only by leaving my marks in the house itself, giving a voice to those African slaves, that I could truly express what it meant for me--an African American--to be there in the seemingly luxurious environs of an Italian villa."

 
Whitfield Lovell, 2 8 M, 2008

In response, Lovell created site-specific drawings on the walls of the villa using its history as the theme, a dignified image of a black person.[1] This was Lovell's first installation piece.[8]

In 1995, while an artist in residence at Rice University in Houston, Texas, Lovell created his second installation. The piece, entitled Echo, was at Project Row Houses, a venue comprising abandoned "shot gun" houses in which artists create installations. Of the project, Lovell has said: "Villa Val Lemme was the first time I worked directly on the wall. At the time I wanted to explore installation further but wanted the right circumstances to arise. When I was approached to do a row house it was just the right time. The feeling in the house was ideal for trying new ideas related to my interest in old photographs of "anonymous" people".[7]

Whispers From the Walls was Lovell's fourth installation, created during a 1999 residency at the University of North Texas Art Gallery in Denton. Lovell created a rectangular house of salvaged boards with multicolored peeling paint. He covered the floors with soil and old clothing through which gallery visitors walked. Inside the house was a single room filled with furniture, clothing, personal objects, and sound. On the interior walls, life-size charcoal drawings suggested human residents. This exhibition appeared the Seattle Art Museum and the Studio Museum in Harlem on tour.

Portrayals, which originated at the Neuberger Museum in Purchase, NY, in the spring of 2000, included nineteen tableaux.

Visitation: The Richmond Project focused on Richmond, Virginia's historically African-American district Jackson Ward, "the nation's first major black entrepreneurial community."[9] It traveled to the University of Wyoming, Laramie; the Columbus Museum Uptown, Georgia; and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, Australia, in 2004.

SANCTUARY: The Great Dismal Swamp originated at the Contemporary Art Center of Virginia. It was inspired by accounts of runaway slaves who hid in or escaped through the 2,200-square mile Great Dismal Swamp. Of the project, Lovell has said:

"The main inspiration for Sanctuary: The Great Dismal Swamp, aside from the readings and research I did, was visiting the swamp itself. The people at the Dismal Swamp Wildlife Refuge hosted me for a day of hikes and a boat ride across Lake Drummond, which is in the center of the swamp. Lake Drummond is an egg-shaped pond about three miles across and no deeper than six feet at its center. It was referred to by Irish poet John O'Reilly as 'the most wonderful and beautiful sheet of water on the continent.' The water is a rich brown color, like tea, the result of the tannin that dripped from the juniper trees over the centuries. That was the inspiration for the pool of water that became the centerpiece for the installation.

"Most important for me were the moments when I stood silently in the swamp and just listened to the sounds and felt the ambience."

"For the installation we got thirty trees and stood them up in the gallery, with branches, leaves, and vines extending into the space, creating barriers and obstacles for the viewer. The floor was covered with mulch, and there were sounds of crickets, cicadas, and barking hounds throughout. Twelve basins and washboards filled with water were placed around the room, with the faces of people looking out at the viewer. Many of the images and objects that implied human inhabitants and the shingle industry were submerged in water. Somehow the legacy of those who lived hidden in the swamp to avoid slavery seemed to have been nearly lost, buried under that lake."[10]

Tableaux edit

In 1997, during a month in Mount Desert, Maine, at the Acadia Summer Art Program, Lovell made his first tableaux: charcoal drawings on antique wood panels coupled with found objects.

Kin Series edit

The Kin Series (2008 - 2011) is collection of sixty works made of individual portrait images in Conte crayon on paper combined with found objects. The objects sometimes overlap with the image and cast shadows. The drawing and object are then framed in glass and black metal.

The series began with a drawing based on a photo-booth photograph of a young boy. Lovell says: "There was something about that young boy's face that captivated me. His eyes and mouth were so expressive, as if he were about to cry. I felt compelled to try and capture that emotional quality."

For this series, Lovell's photographic sources differ from his vintage studio shots. Instead, he uses mug shots, passport photos, and photobooth images. Lovell has described the difference in using these photographs as sources: "Once the Kin Series got going, I noticed a major difference in the drawings. The difference was the people were more harshly lit, not made up, and the photos were untouched and there was often a reluctance in their expressions. I saw those qualities as more honest and raw (if I may), whereas in the studio portrait photos that I have worked from, the sitters appear very elegant and posed. Those people were very invested in how they presented themselves. They chose the day, the clothes, the photographer, etc."[11][12]

Collecting edit

Lovell's Tableaux and Kin Series include an abundance of antique objects that are symptomatic of Lovell's love of collecting. Lovell has said: "I began collecting hands after I had already been using hands in my work. The more I learned about the iconography of hands, the more excited I was to continue with the theme. Also, my interest in collecting crayon portraits came simultaneously with the images in the Hand Series, thought I didn't consciously think about it at the time ... There has always been a reason for my wanting to own certain objects more than others. I've tried to be a focused collector, so that I was spending my money on things that fed the work."[7]

Awards edit

Collections edit

Lovell's work is held in the following permanent collections, among others:

Solo exhibitions edit

  • 1982 Interchurch Center, New York, New York
  • 1984 Galeria Morivivi, New York, New York
  • 1985 John Jay College, New York, New York
  • 1987 Harlem School of the Arts, New York, New York
  • 1988 Jersey City Museum, Jersey City, NJ
  • 1993 Lehman College Art Gallery, New York, New York
  • 1997 Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, Winston-Salem, NC
  • 1997 DC Moore Gallery, New York, New York
  • 1998 Collecting Inspiration, The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA
  • 1999-2005 Whispers From the Walls - An Installation by Whitfield Lovell, University of North Texas Art Gallery, Denton, TX (traveled to: Texas Fine Art Association, The Jones Center for Contemporary Art, Austin, TX; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA; The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY; Robeson Art Gallery, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ; Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Virginia Beach, VA; Texarkana Regional Arts & Humanities Council, Texarkana, TX; Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Montgomery, AL; Public Library of Charlotte & Mecklenburg County, Charlotte, NC; California African American Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Reed College, Portland, OR; National Civil Rights Museum, Memphis, TN; San Antonio Museum of Art, TX; Louisiana State University, Union Art Gallery, LA; Stedman Art Gallery, Rutgers-Camden, NJ; Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, AR; Dane G. Hansen Memorial Museum, Logan, KS)
  • 2000 Recent Tableaux, DC Moore Gallery, New York, New York
  • 2000–02 Portrayals, Neuberger Museum of Art, State University of New York, Purchase, NY (traveled to: Montclair Art Museum, Montclair, NJ; Tubman African-American Museum, Macon, GA; Evansville Museum of Art, Evansville, IN)
  • 2001 Beyond the Frame: Whitfield Lovell, Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville, TN
  • 2001 Embers, Boston University Art Gallery, Boston, MA
  • 2001 Whitfield Lovell, Recent Tableaux, Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia, Richmond, VA
  • 2001–04 Visitation: The Richmond Project, Hand Workshop Art Center, Richmond, VA (traveled to: University of Wyoming Art Museum, Laramie, WY; The Columbus Museum, Columbus, GA; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia)
  • 2002 SANCTUARY: The Great Dismal Swamp, An Installation by Whitfield Lovell, Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Virginia Beach, VA
  • 2002 Whitfield Lovell: Memories, Thomasville Cultural Center, Thomasville, GA (traveled to: Albany Museum of Art, Albany, GA)
  • 2002 Whitfield Lovell: Embers, DC Moore Gallery, New York, New York
  • 2003 Whitfield Lovell: Tableaux, Art Museum of Southeast Texas, Beaumont, TX
  • 2003 GRACE: A Project by Whitfield Lovell, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, New York
  • 2003 Whitfield Lovell: Ancestors, Flint Institute of Arts, MI
  • 2003 That You Know Who We Are: Works by Whitfield Lovell, Zora Neale Hurston National Museum of Fine Arts, Eatonville, FL
  • 2004 Whitfield Lovell, Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA
  • 2004 Whitfield Lovell: Tableaux, Olin Art Gallery, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH
  • 2005 Whitfield Lovell: Homegoing, John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI
  • 2006 Whitfield Lovell, DC Moore Gallery, New York, New York
  • 2008 Whitfield Lovell: All Things in Time, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York
  • 2008 Whitfield Lovell: Kith & Kin, DC Moore Gallery, New York, New York
  • 2009 Whitfield Lovell: Distant Relations, Berrie Center for Performing and Visual Arts, Ramapo College of New Jersey, Mahwah, NJ
  • 2009 Mercy, Patience and Destiny: The Women of Whitfield Lovell's Tableaux, Atlanta College of Art Gallery of Savannah College of Art and Design, Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta, GA
  • 2009 Whitfield Lovell: One Man's Treasures, Hampton University Museum, Hampton, VA
  • 2010 Whitfield Lovell, Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA
  • 2011 More Than You Know: Works By Whitfield Lovell, Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA[20]
  • 2013 Whitfield Lovell: Deep River, Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, TN
  • 2015 Whitfield Lovell: Deep River, Telfair Museums, Savannah, GA
  • 2015 Whitfield Lovell: Deep River, The Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, Jacksonville, FL
  • 2016 Whitfield Lovell: The Kin Series and Related Works", The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC
  • 2017 Inbox: Whitfield Lovell, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (March 25–May 26, 2017)[21]

Bibliography edit

  • "Whitfield Lovell", Tom Otterness, BOMB, 91/Spring 2005
  • Bartholomew F. Bland, Whitfield Lovell, Whitfield Lovell: all things in time, Hudson River Museum, 2008, ISBN 9780943651385
  • Lucy R. Lippard, Carla Hanzal, Leslie King-Hammond, and Jennifer Ellen Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell: Whispers from the Walls, Pomegranate, 2003, ISBN 978-0-7649-2447-7

Books and exhibition catalogues edit

  • 1983 Rosner-Jeria, Elaine, and William Jung. Trans-Fers (exhibition catalogue). New York: Henry Street Settlement and El Grupo Morivivi, 1983.
  • 1983 Bickimer, David A. Christ the Placenta, Notes to My Mentor on Religious Education. Birmingham: Religious Education Press, 1983.
  • 1984 Artist in the Marketplace (exhibition catalogue). Bronx, NY: The Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1984.
  • 1986 Verre, Philip. Curator's Choice II (exhibition catalogue). Bronx, NY: Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1986.
  • 1986 Black Visions '86 (exhibition catalogue). New York: Tweed Gallery, 1986.
  • 1987 Bibby, Diedre. Who's Uptown: Harlem '87 (exhibition catalogue). New York: Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, 1987.
  • 1988 Other Countries: Gay Black Voices, New York, NY: Cultural Council Foundation/Management and Resources for the Arts, 1988.
  • 1988 Jones, Kellie. New Visions: James Little, Whitfield Lovell, Alison Saar (exhibition catalogue). Queens, NY: The Queens Museum, 1988.
  • 1989 Smith, Valerie. Selections from the Artists File, Artists Space (exhibition catalogue). New York: Artists Space, 1989.
  • 1990 Stanislaus, Grace. New Perspectives: Colin Chase and Whitfield Lovell (exhibition catalogue). Miami: Miami Dade College, Wolfson Gallery, 1990.
  • 1990 Georgia, Olivia. Family Stories (exhibition catalogue). Staten Island, NY: Snug Harbor Cultural Center, 1990.
  • 1991 Long, Richard, and Judith Wilson. African-American Works on Paper from the Cochran Collection (exhibition catalogue). Atlanta: Double Density, 1991.
  • 1991 Jones, Kellie, and Thomas W. Sokolowski. Interrogating Identity (exhibition catalogue). New York: Grey Art Gallery and Study Center, 1991.
  • 1991 Bellamy, Peter. The Artist Project, Portraits of the Real Word/New York Artists 1981–1990. New York: IN Publishing, 1991.
  • 1993 Yau, John. The Bronx Celebrates Whitfield Lovell (exhibition catalogue). Bronx, NY: Lehman College Art Gallery, 1993.
  • 1993 Hazlewood, Carl. Current Identities, Recent Painting in the United States (exhibition catalogue). Newark, NJ: Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, 1993.
  • 1994 Henning, Roni. Screen Printing: Water Based Techniques, Non-Toxic Methods for a Safe Environment. New York: Watson Guptill Publications, 1994.
  • 1994 Balka, Sigmund R. Empowerment: The Art of African American Artists (exhibition catalogue). White Plains, NY: Krasdale Gallery, 1994.
  • 1995 Yau, John. Murder (exhibition catalogue). Santa Monica: Smart Art Press, 1995.
  • 1995 de Larrazabel, Eudoxia Estrella. IV Bienal International de Pintura, Cuenca, Ecuador (exhibition catalogue). Cuenca, Ecuador, 1995.
  • 1996 Wolfe, Townsend. National Drawing Invitational (exhibition catalogue). Little Rock: Arkansas Arts Center, 1996.
  • 1996 Chin, Mel. Scratch (exhibition catalogue). New York: Thread Waxing Space, 1996.
  • 1996 Cappellazzo, Amy. Real (exhibition catalogue). Miami: Bass Museum of Art, 1996.
  • 1997 Llanes, Llilian. Sexta Bienal de la Habana, El Individuo y Su Memoria (exhibition catalogue). Havana, Cuba: Centro Wifredo Lam, 1997.
  • 1998 Taha, Halima M. Collecting African American Art: Works on Paper and Canvas. New York: Crown Publishers, 1998.
  • 1999 Lippard, Lucy, and Jennifer Ellen Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell, Whispers From the Walls (exhibition catalogue). Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, 1999.
  • 1999 Hertz, Betti-Sue. Urban Mythologies: The Bronx Represented Since the 1960s (exhibition catalogue). Bronx, NY: Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1999.
  • 2000 Wei, Lilly. Portrayals (exhibition catalogue). Purchase, NY: The Neuberger Museum of Art, 2000.
  • 2000 20 Years of Artists in the Marketplace Program (CD-ROM). Bronx, NY: The Bronx Museum of the Arts, 2000.
  • 2000 Hills, Patricia. Recent Tableaux (exhibition catalogue). New York, NY: DC Moore Gallery, 2000.
  • 2000 Foster, Carter E., and Stephen F. F. Jost. Drawing on Language (exhibition catalogue). Cleveland: SPACES Gallery, 2000.
  • 2000 DC Moore Gallery. Whitfield Lovell: Portrayals (exhibition catalogue).
  • 2001 Wolfe, Townsend. About Face: Collection of Jackye and Curtis Finch, Jr. (exhibition catalogue). Little Rock: Arkansas Arts Center, 2001: 62, illus.
  • 2001 Selections: Painting (exhibition catalogue). Oakdale, NY: Dowling College, 2001.
  • 2001 Makrandi, Nandini. Beyond the Frame: Whitfield Lovell (exhibition brochure). Knoxville: Knoxville Museum of Art, 2001.
  • 2001 Kushner, Robert. Beauty Without Regret (exhibition catalogue). Santa Fe: Bellas Artes Gallery, 2001.
  • 2001 Fairbrother, Trevor. "Going Forward, Looking Back," in Words of Wisdom: A Curator's Vade Mecum on Contemporary Art, New York: Independent Curators International, 2001: 56-58.
  • 2002 Smagula, Howard J. Creative Drawing, London, England: Lawrence King Publishing, 2002: 15, 133.
  • 2002 Nahas, Dominique. Whitfield Lovell: Embers (exhibition catalogue). New York: DC Moore Gallery, 2002.
  • 2002 Hanzal, Carla. SANCTUARY: The Great Dismal Swamp, An Installation by Whitfield Lovell (exhibition booklet). Virginia Beach: Contemporary Art Center of Virginia, 2002.
  • 2003 Lippard, Lucy R., Carla Hanzal, Leslie King-Hammond, and Jennifer Ellen Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell: Whispers from the Walls, 2nd edn, San Francisco: Pomegranate, 2003.
  • 2003 Lapcek, Barbara. "Whitfield Lovell: Visual Artist," in Hatch-Billops Collections, Inc.: Artist & Influence, Vol. XXI, New York: Hatch-Billops Collection, 2003: 175-192.
  • 2003 Gerdts, William H. et al. American Art at the Flint Institute of Arts, Flint, MI: Flint Institute of Arts, 2003: 260-261.
  • 2003 Everett, Gwen. African American Masters: Highlights from the Smithsonian American Art Museum. New York: Harry N. Abrams; Washington, DC: Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2003.
  • 2003 Bessire, Mark H. C. Skowhegan 2002-2003 Faculty Exhibition (exhibition catalogue). Portland, ME: Institute of Contemporary Art, Maine College of Art, 2003.
  • 2004 Princenthal, Nancy et al. Whitfield Lovell, in +Witness (exhibition catalogue). Sydney: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2004: 42-49.
  • 2004 Brookman, Philip. Common Ground: Discovering Community in 150 Years of Art (exhibition catalogue). London: Merrell Publishers, 2004.
  • 2005 Yee, Lydia. Collection Remixed (exhibition catalogue). Bronx, NY: The Bronx Museum of the Arts, 2005: 54-55.
  • 2007 182nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Art (exhibition catalogue). New York: National Academy Museum, 2007: illus. 133.
  • 2007 Reynolds, Jock. Art For Yale: Collecting for a New Century (exhibition catalogue). New Haven, CT: Yale University Art Gallery, 2007: illus. 334.
  • 2008 Conrad, Dr. Derek Conrad. The Other Mainstream II: Selections from the Collection of Mikki and Stanley Weithorn (exhibition catalogue). Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University Art Museum, 2008: illus. 31.
  • 2008 Heartney, Eleanor. Art and Today, New York: Phaidon Press, 2008: illus. 412.[22]
  • 2008 Sims, Lowery Stokes. Whitfield Lovell: All Things in Time, Yonkers, NY: Hudson River Museum, 2008.[23]
  • 2009 Lewis, Sarah. Mercy, Patience and Destiny: The Women of Whitfield Lovell's Tableaux (exhibition catalogue). Atlanta: The ACA Gallery of SCAD, 2009.[24]
  • 2009 Kim, Linda. "Distant Relations: Identity and Estrangement in Whitfield Lovell's Kin Series,"[25] in Distant Relations (exhibition catalogue). Mahwah, NJ: Ramapo College, 2009.
  • 2009 Carson, Charles D. and Julie L. McGee. Sound:Print:Record: African American Legacies (exhibition catalogue). Newark, DE: University Museums, University of Delaware, 2009: illus. cover, 46.[26]
  • 2010 United States Mission to the United Nations, New York: ART in Embassies Exhibition (exhibition catalog), Washington, DC: Art in Embassies, 2010.
  • 2010 Franks, Pamela and Robert E. Steele. Embodied: Black Identities in American Art from the Yale University Art Gallery (exhibition catalog). New Haven, CT: Yale University Art Gallery, 2010: illus. 45.[27]
  • 2010 Griffin, Farah Jasmine. "Whitfield Lovell", in RE: COLLECTION, Selected Works from The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York: The Studio Museum in Harlem, 2010.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "In the Nooks of History: Absence and Remembering in the Art of Whitfield Lovell (A'81)". The Cooper Union. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  2. ^ Lippard, Lucy R., Carla Hanzal, Leslie King-Hammond, and Jennifer Ellen Way, The Art of Whitfield Lovell: Whispers from the Walls, 2nd edn, San Francisco: Pomegranate, 2003, pp. 111–112.
  3. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), p. 112.
  4. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), pp. 112–113.
  5. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), pp. 115.
  6. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), p. 117.
  7. ^ a b c Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), p. 119.
  8. ^ "Installations" section: Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), p. 118.
  9. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell: Whispers from the Walls (2003), pp. 120–121.
  10. ^ Lippard, Hanzal, King-Hammond, and Way. The Art of Whitfield Lovell (2003), p. 121.
  11. ^ "Kin Series" section: McGee, Julie L. "Whitfield Lovell: Autour du Monde", Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art, no. 26 (Spring, 2010): 54-57.
  12. ^ Midgette, Anne (2016-10-08). "An artist refashions the past: Whitfield Lovell's 'Kin'". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-03-30.
  13. ^ "Lecture: Whitfield Lovell". MassArt. 2016-12-15. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  14. ^ "Global Card III". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  15. ^ "Pago Pago". Cummer Museum. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  16. ^ "Wise Like That". The Metropolitan Museum of Ar. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  17. ^ "Whitfield Lovell. Pop/Pistol. 1990 | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  18. ^ "Lovell, Whitfield". National Museum of African American History and Culture.
  19. ^ "whitfield lovell". SAM Blog, Seattle Art Museum. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
  20. ^ College, Smith. "Whitfield Lovell". Smith College Museum of Art. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  21. ^ "Inbox: Whitfield Lovell". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  22. ^ Heartney, Eleanor (2008). Art & today. London; New York: Phaidon Press. ISBN 9780714845142. OCLC 438327111.
  23. ^ Lovell, Whitfield; Hudson River Museum (2008). Whitfield Lovell: all things in time. Yonkers: Hudson River Museum. ISBN 978-0943651385. OCLC 263660782.
  24. ^ Lovell, Whitfield; Savannah College of Art and Design (2009). Mercy, patience and destiny: the women of Whitfield Lovell's tableaux. Atlanta; New York: Savannah College of Art & Design ; Distributed by DAP/Distributed Art Publishers. ISBN 9780615222028. OCLC 495780530.
  25. ^ Kim, Linda (January 2009). "Distant Relations: Identity and Estrangement in Whitfield Lovell's Kin Series". Whitfield Lovell, Distant Relations.
  26. ^ McGee, Julie L; Carson, Charles D; University of Delaware; University Museums (2009). Sound print record: African American legacies. Newark, Del.: University Museums, University of Delaware. ISBN 9780615307077. OCLC 608022140.
  27. ^ Franks, Pamela; Steele, Robert E; Arabindan-Kesson, Anna; Yale University (New Haven, Conn.); Art Gallery; David C. Driskell Center (2010). Embodied: black identities in American art from the Yale University Art Gallery. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Art Gallery. ISBN 9780894679773. OCLC 759868364.
  28. ^ Gwinn, Elizabeth; Haynes, Lauren; Ahuja, Mequitta; Studio Museum in Harlem (2010). Re:collection: selected works from the Studio Museum in Harlem. New York, NY: The Studio Museum in Harlem. ISBN 9780942949049. OCLC 705024967.

External links edit

whitfield, lovell, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article,. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Whitfield Lovell news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Whitfield Lovell born October 2 1959 is a contemporary African American artist who is known primarily for his drawings of African American individuals from the first half of the 20th century Lovell creates these drawings in pencil oil stick or charcoal on paper wood or directly on walls In his most recent work these drawings are paired with found objects that Lovell collects at flea markets and antique shops Whitfield LovellBorn 1959 10 02 October 2 1959 age 64 Bronx New York U S NationalityAmericanEducationThe High School of Music and ArtManhattanville College Maryland Institute College of ArtParsons School of DesignAlma materCooper UnionNew York University Contents 1 Early career 2 Installations 3 Tableaux 4 Kin Series 5 Collecting 6 Awards 7 Collections 8 Solo exhibitions 9 Bibliography 10 Books and exhibition catalogues 11 References 12 External linksEarly career editBorn October 2 1959 in the Bronx New York to Gladys Glover Lovell an elementary school teacher from South Carolina and Allister Lovell a postal clerk and photographer of West Indian descent 1 Whitfield Lovell grew up in the Bronx and attended The High School of Music and Art in Manhattan During high school he also participated in a variety of extracurricular art programs the Metropolitan Museum of Art High School Program the Whitney Museum Art Resources Center the New York State Summer School for the Arts in Fredonia New York and the Cooper Union Saturday Program 2 In 1977 Lovell traveled to Spain to study painting and sculpture with Manhattanville College At El Museo del Prado in Madrid Spain he decided that he would become a painter Lovell has said I knew I would go into some form of art but I wasn t sure which I was interested in fashion and advertising as options But while I was standing in front of a Velasquez painting I had an amazing spiritual experience The painter had communicated with me through centuries and cultures and I suddenly understood the role of the artist I ran from room to room Goya El Greco Reubens and Picasso all began to speak out to me Whatever they were doing in those rooms was what I wanted to do with my life 3 Lovell spent a year at Maryland Institute College of Art MICA Baltimore in 1977 before traveling in France Germany Italy England Austria and the Netherlands with the American Institute For Foreign Study in 1978 When he returned to New York he enrolled in the Fine Arts Department of the Parsons School of Design and then The Cooper Union School of Art from which he graduated in 1981 1 4 In 1982 Lovell traveled to Egypt Nigeria and the Republic of Benin West Africa In 1985 Lovell attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture where he reconsidered the nature of his own work In Skowhegan I had time to really think about what I wanted to do with my work I felt the formal issues about color were fighting with the narratives I was getting at So I narrowed down the color and began to work monochromatically I had all of my father s old photographs mailed to me and I began a process of looking through these images each day before starting to work The work became more personal and a reflection of the way I saw myself as an artist 5 This practice using old photographs as inspiration and source material has stayed with Whitfield to this day In 1986 Lovell stayed with relatives in Barbados West Indies In 1989 he attended New York University NYU Graduate Program in Venice Italy In 1990 he traveled to Mexico where he began collecting ex votos and retablos which he cited as influences in his work After looking at European paintings for so many years and then the great black painters Jacob Lawrence Bob Thompson and Horace Pippin I looked toward other cultures for inspiration I found myself more attracted to folk art which wasn t as concerned with making high art but with the joy of storytelling My training however was heavily steeped in European artistic values even the earlier pieces which had more modernist notions in them really did come from that tradition So I also found artists from Latin America to be a very refreshing discovery for me They seemed to fuse European colonial styles with a different sensibility I felt they were more passionate about the religious and social narratives and less concerned with skill Although I didn t grow up Catholic I was attracted to that symbolism and to certain decorative elements that I feel are part of many images one sees growing up in a place like the Bronx Rather than return to Venice to finish my master s degree I spent a lot of time in Mexico getting an education of a different sort 6 In 1994 Lovell s work was shown as part of the American contingent at the IV Bienal Internacional de Pintura en Cuenca Ecuador Other American artists exhibiting at this show were Donald Locke Philemona Williamson Freddy Rodriguez and Emilio Cruz 7 Installations editIn 1993 Lovell visited a private artist s retreat at the Villa Val Lemme in Capriatta d Orba Italy The villa had been built by a slave trader in the early 20th century There were grotesque paintings of Africans with nose rings lining the ceilings of some of the rooms Also the coat of arms on the front of the building had an African face on it and a few very elderly locals could apparently remember the blacks who had lived there The slaver had obviously continued to trade long after it had become illegal but that was not unheard of in some other countries It was hard to ignore the background of the place Ordinarily the experience of being somewhere new would have fermented over time and then become a piece much later That s how I was used to working But in this case I later realized it was only by leaving my marks in the house itself giving a voice to those African slaves that I could truly express what it meant for me an African American to be there in the seemingly luxurious environs of an Italian villa nbsp Whitfield Lovell 2 8 M 2008 In response Lovell created site specific drawings on the walls of the villa using its history as the theme a dignified image of a black person 1 This was Lovell s first installation piece 8 In 1995 while an artist in residence at Rice University in Houston Texas Lovell created his second installation The piece entitled Echo was at Project Row Houses a venue comprising abandoned shot gun houses in which artists create installations Of the project Lovell has said Villa Val Lemme was the first time I worked directly on the wall At the time I wanted to explore installation further but wanted the right circumstances to arise When I was approached to do a row house it was just the right time The feeling in the house was ideal for trying new ideas related to my interest in old photographs of anonymous people 7 Whispers From the Walls was Lovell s fourth installation created during a 1999 residency at the University of North Texas Art Gallery in Denton Lovell created a rectangular house of salvaged boards with multicolored peeling paint He covered the floors with soil and old clothing through which gallery visitors walked Inside the house was a single room filled with furniture clothing personal objects and sound On the interior walls life size charcoal drawings suggested human residents This exhibition appeared the Seattle Art Museum and the Studio Museum in Harlem on tour Portrayals which originated at the Neuberger Museum in Purchase NY in the spring of 2000 included nineteen tableaux Visitation The Richmond Project focused on Richmond Virginia s historically African American district Jackson Ward the nation s first major black entrepreneurial community 9 It traveled to the University of Wyoming Laramie the Columbus Museum Uptown Georgia and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney Australia in 2004 SANCTUARY The Great Dismal Swamp originated at the Contemporary Art Center of Virginia It was inspired by accounts of runaway slaves who hid in or escaped through the 2 200 square mile Great Dismal Swamp Of the project Lovell has said The main inspiration for Sanctuary The Great Dismal Swamp aside from the readings and research I did was visiting the swamp itself The people at the Dismal Swamp Wildlife Refuge hosted me for a day of hikes and a boat ride across Lake Drummond which is in the center of the swamp Lake Drummond is an egg shaped pond about three miles across and no deeper than six feet at its center It was referred to by Irish poet John O Reilly as the most wonderful and beautiful sheet of water on the continent The water is a rich brown color like tea the result of the tannin that dripped from the juniper trees over the centuries That was the inspiration for the pool of water that became the centerpiece for the installation Most important for me were the moments when I stood silently in the swamp and just listened to the sounds and felt the ambience For the installation we got thirty trees and stood them up in the gallery with branches leaves and vines extending into the space creating barriers and obstacles for the viewer The floor was covered with mulch and there were sounds of crickets cicadas and barking hounds throughout Twelve basins and washboards filled with water were placed around the room with the faces of people looking out at the viewer Many of the images and objects that implied human inhabitants and the shingle industry were submerged in water Somehow the legacy of those who lived hidden in the swamp to avoid slavery seemed to have been nearly lost buried under that lake 10 Tableaux editIn 1997 during a month in Mount Desert Maine at the Acadia Summer Art Program Lovell made his first tableaux charcoal drawings on antique wood panels coupled with found objects Kin Series editThe Kin Series 2008 2011 is collection of sixty works made of individual portrait images in Conte crayon on paper combined with found objects The objects sometimes overlap with the image and cast shadows The drawing and object are then framed in glass and black metal The series began with a drawing based on a photo booth photograph of a young boy Lovell says There was something about that young boy s face that captivated me His eyes and mouth were so expressive as if he were about to cry I felt compelled to try and capture that emotional quality For this series Lovell s photographic sources differ from his vintage studio shots Instead he uses mug shots passport photos and photobooth images Lovell has described the difference in using these photographs as sources Once the Kin Series got going I noticed a major difference in the drawings The difference was the people were more harshly lit not made up and the photos were untouched and there was often a reluctance in their expressions I saw those qualities as more honest and raw if I may whereas in the studio portrait photos that I have worked from the sitters appear very elegant and posed Those people were very invested in how they presented themselves They chose the day the clothes the photographer etc 11 12 Collecting editLovell s Tableaux and Kin Series include an abundance of antique objects that are symptomatic of Lovell s love of collecting Lovell has said I began collecting hands after I had already been using hands in my work The more I learned about the iconography of hands the more excited I was to continue with the theme Also my interest in collecting crayon portraits came simultaneously with the images in the Hand Series thought I didn t consciously think about it at the time There has always been a reason for my wanting to own certain objects more than others I ve tried to be a focused collector so that I was spending my money on things that fed the work 7 Awards edit1982 Jerome Foundation Fellowship to the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop 1985 Eastman Scholarship to the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture 1986 Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop Fellowship 1986 New York State Council on the Arts Grant 1987 New York State Council on the Arts Grant 1988 Mousem D Asilah Residency Asilah Morocco 1990 Promise of Learnings Inc Award for Excellence in Education 1990 Metropolitan Transportation Authority Arts for Transit Poster Commission 1990 Penny McCall Foundation Grant 1990 Artists Homeless Shelter Collaborative Grant 2001 Art Awareness Residency Lexington NY 2002 Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art Virginia Beach VA Artist in Residence 2003 Richard C Diebenkorn Fellowship San Francisco Art Institute California 2007 Emil amp Dines Carlsen Award National Academy Museum 2007 MacArthur Fellows Program Chicago Illinois 13 2009 Malvina Hoffman Artists Fund Prize 184th Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Art National Academy Museum New York New York 2009 Nancy Graves Grant for Visual Artists The Nancy Graves Foundation New York New York 2014 National Academy Award for Excellence New York New YorkCollections editLovell s work is held in the following permanent collections among others Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Maryland Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn New York 14 Columbus Museum of Art Columbus Ohio Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington DC Cornell Fine Arts Museum Winter Park Florida Cummer Museum Jacksonville Florida 15 High Museum of Art Atlanta Georgia Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City New York 16 Museum of Modern Art MoMA New York City New York 17 National Gallery of Art Washington D C National Museum of African American History and Culture Smithsonian Washington D C 18 Neuberger Museum of Art Purchase New York New Orleans Museum of Art New Orleans Louisiana Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Philadelphia Pennsylvania The Phillips Collection Washington D C Seattle Art Museum Seattle Washington 19 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington D C Studio Museum in Harlem New York New York Whitney Museum of American Art New York New York Williams College Museum of Art Williamstown Massachusetts Yale University Art Gallery New Haven ConnecticutSolo exhibitions edit1982 Interchurch Center New York New York 1984 Galeria Morivivi New York New York 1985 John Jay College New York New York 1987 Harlem School of the Arts New York New York 1988 Jersey City Museum Jersey City NJ 1993 Lehman College Art Gallery New York New York 1997 Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art Winston Salem NC 1997 DC Moore Gallery New York New York 1998 Collecting Inspiration The Andy Warhol Museum Pittsburgh PA 1999 2005 Whispers From the Walls An Installation by Whitfield Lovell University of North Texas Art Gallery Denton TX traveled to Texas Fine Art Association The Jones Center for Contemporary Art Austin TX Seattle Art Museum Seattle WA The Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY Robeson Art Gallery Rutgers State University of New Jersey Newark NJ Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art Virginia Beach VA Texarkana Regional Arts amp Humanities Council Texarkana TX Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts Montgomery AL Public Library of Charlotte amp Mecklenburg County Charlotte NC California African American Museum Los Angeles CA Reed College Portland OR National Civil Rights Museum Memphis TN San Antonio Museum of Art TX Louisiana State University Union Art Gallery LA Stedman Art Gallery Rutgers Camden NJ Arkansas Arts Center Little Rock AR Dane G Hansen Memorial Museum Logan KS 2000 Recent Tableaux DC Moore Gallery New York New York 2000 02 Portrayals Neuberger Museum of Art State University of New York Purchase NY traveled to Montclair Art Museum Montclair NJ Tubman African American Museum Macon GA Evansville Museum of Art Evansville IN 2001 Beyond the Frame Whitfield Lovell Knoxville Museum of Art Knoxville TN 2001 Embers Boston University Art Gallery Boston MA 2001 Whitfield Lovell Recent Tableaux Black History Museum amp Cultural Center of Virginia Richmond VA 2001 04 Visitation The Richmond Project Hand Workshop Art Center Richmond VA traveled to University of Wyoming Art Museum Laramie WY The Columbus Museum Columbus GA Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney Australia 2002 SANCTUARY The Great Dismal Swamp An Installation by Whitfield Lovell Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art Virginia Beach VA 2002 Whitfield Lovell Memories Thomasville Cultural Center Thomasville GA traveled to Albany Museum of Art Albany GA 2002 Whitfield Lovell Embers DC Moore Gallery New York New York 2003 Whitfield Lovell Tableaux Art Museum of Southeast Texas Beaumont TX 2003 GRACE A Project by Whitfield Lovell Bronx Museum of the Arts Bronx New York 2003 Whitfield Lovell Ancestors Flint Institute of Arts MI 2003 That You Know Who We Are Works by Whitfield Lovell Zora Neale Hurston National Museum of Fine Arts Eatonville FL 2004 Whitfield Lovell Arthur Roger Gallery New Orleans LA 2004 Whitfield Lovell Tableaux Olin Art Gallery Kenyon College Gambier OH 2005 Whitfield Lovell Homegoing John Michael Kohler Arts Center Sheboygan WI 2006 Whitfield Lovell DC Moore Gallery New York New York 2008 Whitfield Lovell All Things in Time Hudson River Museum Yonkers New York 2008 Whitfield Lovell Kith amp Kin DC Moore Gallery New York New York 2009 Whitfield Lovell Distant Relations Berrie Center for Performing and Visual Arts Ramapo College of New Jersey Mahwah NJ 2009 Mercy Patience and Destiny The Women of Whitfield Lovell s Tableaux Atlanta College of Art Gallery of Savannah College of Art and Design Woodruff Arts Center Atlanta GA 2009 Whitfield Lovell One Man s Treasures Hampton University Museum Hampton VA 2010 Whitfield Lovell Arthur Roger Gallery New Orleans LA 2011 More Than You Know Works By Whitfield Lovell Smith College Museum of Art Northampton MA 20 2013 Whitfield Lovell Deep River Hunter Museum of American Art Chattanooga TN 2015 Whitfield Lovell Deep River Telfair Museums Savannah GA 2015 Whitfield Lovell Deep River The Cummer Museum of Art amp Gardens Jacksonville FL 2016 Whitfield Lovell The Kin Series and Related Works The Phillips Collection Washington DC 2017 Inbox Whitfield Lovell The Museum of Modern Art New York NY March 25 May 26 2017 21 Bibliography edit Whitfield Lovell Tom Otterness BOMB 91 Spring 2005 Bartholomew F Bland Whitfield Lovell Whitfield Lovell all things in time Hudson River Museum 2008 ISBN 9780943651385 Lucy R Lippard Carla Hanzal Leslie King Hammond and Jennifer Ellen Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell Whispers from the Walls Pomegranate 2003 ISBN 978 0 7649 2447 7Books and exhibition catalogues edit1983 Rosner Jeria Elaine and William Jung Trans Fers exhibition catalogue New York Henry Street Settlement and El Grupo Morivivi 1983 1983 Bickimer David A Christ the Placenta Notes to My Mentor on Religious Education Birmingham Religious Education Press 1983 1984 Artist in the Marketplace exhibition catalogue Bronx NY The Bronx Museum of the Arts 1984 1986 Verre Philip Curator s Choice II exhibition catalogue Bronx NY Bronx Museum of the Arts 1986 1986 Black Visions 86 exhibition catalogue New York Tweed Gallery 1986 1987 Bibby Diedre Who s Uptown Harlem 87 exhibition catalogue New York Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture 1987 1988 Other Countries Gay Black Voices New York NY Cultural Council Foundation Management and Resources for the Arts 1988 1988 Jones Kellie New Visions James Little Whitfield Lovell Alison Saar exhibition catalogue Queens NY The Queens Museum 1988 1989 Smith Valerie Selections from the Artists File Artists Space exhibition catalogue New York Artists Space 1989 1990 Stanislaus Grace New Perspectives Colin Chase and Whitfield Lovell exhibition catalogue Miami Miami Dade College Wolfson Gallery 1990 1990 Georgia Olivia Family Stories exhibition catalogue Staten Island NY Snug Harbor Cultural Center 1990 1991 Long Richard and Judith Wilson African American Works on Paper from the Cochran Collection exhibition catalogue Atlanta Double Density 1991 1991 Jones Kellie and Thomas W Sokolowski Interrogating Identity exhibition catalogue New York Grey Art Gallery and Study Center 1991 1991 Bellamy Peter The Artist Project Portraits of the Real Word New York Artists 1981 1990 New York IN Publishing 1991 1993 Yau John The Bronx Celebrates Whitfield Lovell exhibition catalogue Bronx NY Lehman College Art Gallery 1993 1993 Hazlewood Carl Current Identities Recent Painting in the United States exhibition catalogue Newark NJ Aljira Center for Contemporary Art 1993 1994 Henning Roni Screen Printing Water Based Techniques Non Toxic Methods for a Safe Environment New York Watson Guptill Publications 1994 1994 Balka Sigmund R Empowerment The Art of African American Artists exhibition catalogue White Plains NY Krasdale Gallery 1994 1995 Yau John Murder exhibition catalogue Santa Monica Smart Art Press 1995 1995 de Larrazabel Eudoxia Estrella IV Bienal International de Pintura Cuenca Ecuador exhibition catalogue Cuenca Ecuador 1995 1996 Wolfe Townsend National Drawing Invitational exhibition catalogue Little Rock Arkansas Arts Center 1996 1996 Chin Mel Scratch exhibition catalogue New York Thread Waxing Space 1996 1996 Cappellazzo Amy Real exhibition catalogue Miami Bass Museum of Art 1996 1997 Llanes Llilian Sexta Bienal de la Habana El Individuo y Su Memoria exhibition catalogue Havana Cuba Centro Wifredo Lam 1997 1998 Taha Halima M Collecting African American Art Works on Paper and Canvas New York Crown Publishers 1998 1999 Lippard Lucy and Jennifer Ellen Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell Whispers From the Walls exhibition catalogue Denton TX University of North Texas Press 1999 1999 Hertz Betti Sue Urban Mythologies The Bronx Represented Since the 1960s exhibition catalogue Bronx NY Bronx Museum of the Arts 1999 2000 Wei Lilly Portrayals exhibition catalogue Purchase NY The Neuberger Museum of Art 2000 2000 20 Years of Artists in the Marketplace Program CD ROM Bronx NY The Bronx Museum of the Arts 2000 2000 Hills Patricia Recent Tableaux exhibition catalogue New York NY DC Moore Gallery 2000 2000 Foster Carter E and Stephen F F Jost Drawing on Language exhibition catalogue Cleveland SPACES Gallery 2000 2000 DC Moore Gallery Whitfield Lovell Portrayals exhibition catalogue 2001 Wolfe Townsend About Face Collection of Jackye and Curtis Finch Jr exhibition catalogue Little Rock Arkansas Arts Center 2001 62 illus 2001 Selections Painting exhibition catalogue Oakdale NY Dowling College 2001 2001 Makrandi Nandini Beyond the Frame Whitfield Lovell exhibition brochure Knoxville Knoxville Museum of Art 2001 2001 Kushner Robert Beauty Without Regret exhibition catalogue Santa Fe Bellas Artes Gallery 2001 2001 Fairbrother Trevor Going Forward Looking Back in Words of Wisdom A Curator s Vade Mecum on Contemporary Art New York Independent Curators International 2001 56 58 2002 Smagula Howard J Creative Drawing London England Lawrence King Publishing 2002 15 133 2002 Nahas Dominique Whitfield Lovell Embers exhibition catalogue New York DC Moore Gallery 2002 2002 Hanzal Carla SANCTUARY The Great Dismal Swamp An Installation by Whitfield Lovell exhibition booklet Virginia Beach Contemporary Art Center of Virginia 2002 2003 Lippard Lucy R Carla Hanzal Leslie King Hammond and Jennifer Ellen Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell Whispers from the Walls 2nd edn San Francisco Pomegranate 2003 2003 Lapcek Barbara Whitfield Lovell Visual Artist in Hatch Billops Collections Inc Artist amp Influence Vol XXI New York Hatch Billops Collection 2003 175 192 2003 Gerdts William H et al American Art at the Flint Institute of Arts Flint MI Flint Institute of Arts 2003 260 261 2003 Everett Gwen African American Masters Highlights from the Smithsonian American Art Museum New York Harry N Abrams Washington DC Smithsonian American Art Museum 2003 2003 Bessire Mark H C Skowhegan 2002 2003 Faculty Exhibition exhibition catalogue Portland ME Institute of Contemporary Art Maine College of Art 2003 2004 Princenthal Nancy et al Whitfield Lovell in Witness exhibition catalogue Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art 2004 42 49 2004 Brookman Philip Common Ground Discovering Community in 150 Years of Art exhibition catalogue London Merrell Publishers 2004 2005 Yee Lydia Collection Remixed exhibition catalogue Bronx NY The Bronx Museum of the Arts 2005 54 55 2007 182nd Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Art exhibition catalogue New York National Academy Museum 2007 illus 133 2007 Reynolds Jock Art For Yale Collecting for a New Century exhibition catalogue New Haven CT Yale University Art Gallery 2007 illus 334 2008 Conrad Dr Derek Conrad The Other Mainstream II Selections from the Collection of Mikki and Stanley Weithorn exhibition catalogue Tempe AZ Arizona State University Art Museum 2008 illus 31 2008 Heartney Eleanor Art and Today New York Phaidon Press 2008 illus 412 22 2008 Sims Lowery Stokes Whitfield Lovell All Things in Time Yonkers NY Hudson River Museum 2008 23 2009 Lewis Sarah Mercy Patience and Destiny The Women of Whitfield Lovell s Tableaux exhibition catalogue Atlanta The ACA Gallery of SCAD 2009 24 2009 Kim Linda Distant Relations Identity and Estrangement in Whitfield Lovell s Kin Series 25 in Distant Relations exhibition catalogue Mahwah NJ Ramapo College 2009 2009 Carson Charles D and Julie L McGee Sound Print Record African American Legacies exhibition catalogue Newark DE University Museums University of Delaware 2009 illus cover 46 26 2010 United States Mission to the United Nations New York ART in Embassies Exhibition exhibition catalog Washington DC Art in Embassies 2010 2010 Franks Pamela and Robert E Steele Embodied Black Identities in American Art from the Yale University Art Gallery exhibition catalog New Haven CT Yale University Art Gallery 2010 illus 45 27 2010 Griffin Farah Jasmine Whitfield Lovell in RE COLLECTION Selected Works from The Studio Museum in Harlem New York The Studio Museum in Harlem 2010 28 References edit a b c In the Nooks of History Absence and Remembering in the Art of Whitfield Lovell A 81 The Cooper Union Retrieved 2019 01 04 Lippard Lucy R Carla Hanzal Leslie King Hammond and Jennifer Ellen Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell Whispers from the Walls 2nd edn San Francisco Pomegranate 2003 pp 111 112 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 p 112 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 pp 112 113 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 pp 115 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 p 117 a b c Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 p 119 Installations section Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 p 118 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell Whispers from the Walls 2003 pp 120 121 Lippard Hanzal King Hammond and Way The Art of Whitfield Lovell 2003 p 121 Kin Series section McGee Julie L Whitfield Lovell Autour du Monde Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art no 26 Spring 2010 54 57 Midgette Anne 2016 10 08 An artist refashions the past Whitfield Lovell s Kin Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 03 30 Lecture Whitfield Lovell MassArt 2016 12 15 Retrieved 2019 01 04 Global Card III Brooklyn Museum Retrieved 2019 01 04 Pago Pago Cummer Museum Retrieved 2019 01 04 Wise Like That The Metropolitan Museum of Ar Retrieved 2019 01 04 Whitfield Lovell Pop Pistol 1990 MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2019 01 04 Lovell Whitfield National Museum of African American History and Culture whitfield lovell SAM Blog Seattle Art Museum Retrieved 2019 01 04 College Smith Whitfield Lovell Smith College Museum of Art Retrieved 2019 04 05 Inbox Whitfield Lovell The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2019 04 05 Heartney Eleanor 2008 Art amp today London New York Phaidon Press ISBN 9780714845142 OCLC 438327111 Lovell Whitfield Hudson River Museum 2008 Whitfield Lovell all things in time Yonkers Hudson River Museum ISBN 978 0943651385 OCLC 263660782 Lovell Whitfield Savannah College of Art and Design 2009 Mercy patience and destiny the women of Whitfield Lovell s tableaux Atlanta New York Savannah College of Art amp Design Distributed by DAP Distributed Art Publishers ISBN 9780615222028 OCLC 495780530 Kim Linda January 2009 Distant Relations Identity and Estrangement in Whitfield Lovell s Kin Series Whitfield Lovell Distant Relations McGee Julie L Carson Charles D University of Delaware University Museums 2009 Sound print record African American legacies Newark Del University Museums University of Delaware ISBN 9780615307077 OCLC 608022140 Franks Pamela Steele Robert E Arabindan Kesson Anna Yale University New Haven Conn Art Gallery David C Driskell Center 2010 Embodied black identities in American art from the Yale University Art Gallery New Haven Conn Yale University Art Gallery ISBN 9780894679773 OCLC 759868364 Gwinn Elizabeth Haynes Lauren Ahuja Mequitta Studio Museum in Harlem 2010 Re collection selected works from the Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY The Studio Museum in Harlem ISBN 9780942949049 OCLC 705024967 External links editDC Moore Gallery Whitfield Lovell Whitfield Lovell on Artnet MacArthur Foundation Whitfield Lovell Brooklyn Rail Kith and Kin review Art in America September 2006 Whitfield Lovell at DC Moore http images dcmooregallery com www dcmooregallery com Lovell ArtInAmerica2006 jpg Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art Whitfield Lovell Autour Du Monde http www dcmooregallery com artists whitfield lovell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whitfield Lovell amp oldid 1201582307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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