User:Artandfeminismadvocate/sandbox

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Sandbox Exercise[edit]

Here is a link to a screenshot of my sandbox exercise: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1karXElfvvnPoSY68PktyPF2s8fnClnpTB9qk0gVNSXA/edit?usp=sharing

Introduction to Emma Amos (Painter)[edit]

Emma Amos (16 March 1937 – 20 May 2020) was a postmodern African-American painter and printmaker. Amos is a respected and influential artist whose work engages with important social and cultural issues. Through her paintings, prints, and mixed media works, she created powerful and thought-provoking art that speaks to the experiences of people of color and women. She did so because as a black woman, she constantly felt the need to prove herself in a male-dominate field of art. [1]Hence, her work elicits ambivalence, intellectual recognition, and denial - Amos's art constitutes a form of resistance.

Emma Amos believes that memory creates and shapes history. Hence, she used her art to question preconceived notions by inserting her memories, ideals, and fantasies into the discourse of art history. She critiques the idea of black female passivity and anonymity through the use of manipulating the gaze.[2]

Early life[edit]

Amos was born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1937[3] to India DeLaine Amos and Miles Green Amos.[4] She also has an older brother named Larry.[5]

Emma Amos was considered a child prodigy when it came to art study. [6]She took an interest in art at an early age, creating "masses of paper dolls" and learning figure drawing from issues of Esquire and the art of Alberto Vargas, was painting the figure by the age of nine. Her mother had aspirations of Amos studying with Hale Woodruff, but he did not accept many private students and left the area before she had the opportunity to study with him.[7]At eleven, Amos took a course at Morris Brown College, where she worked on her draftsmanship and took note of the work that African American college students were producing at the time. [8] By high school, Amos was submitting her work to Atlanta University art shows. She graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta at the age of 16, and applied to Antioch College, because of their progressive policies.[7]

Her father exposed her to black intelligentsia; Zora Neale Hurston frequently visited and W.E.B. Du Bois once called on the family.[8]

Education[edit]

Amos studied at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, at the Central School of Art and Design in London and at New York University.[8][9] While at Antioch, Amos worked for half of the year, and studied for the remainder. She worked in Chicago, New York, and in Washington, D.C., which enabled her to visit galleries and museums, which had been less accessible in Atlanta. Her fourth year at Antioch, she went to England and studied at the London Central School of Art, where she learned to print and etch under Anthony Harrison, and began to paint with oils, which she had not done before.[10] Amos received her BFA degree from Antioch in 1958,[11] then went back to London for her degree in etching, which she received in 1959 after two years of study.[11][10] The following year Amos moved to New York City to start working with two printmaking studios.[11] Later on she received her MA at New York University (NYU).[11]

Career[edit]

Amos moved to New York City after feeling stunted by the slow move of the Atlanta art scene. Amos was not expecting the level of racism, sexism, and ageism that she encountered upon moving to New York. Galleries would not accept her under the premise that she was too young to show, and studio teaching jobs rejected her on the grounds that, "We're not hiring right now".[12] Amos was told by both Cooper Union and the Art Students League that they were not hiring after she applied for a teaching position.[13] The difficulty of entering work into galleries led her to teach as an assistant at the Dalton School where she met artists and was introduced to the New York and East Hampton art scene, where she experienced difficulty showing her work in a "man’s scene." It was also around this time that Emma Amos began her career as a textile designer, working for the weaver and colorist Dorothy Liebes, where her designs were translated into unique carpets.

In New York, Amos joined the printmaking studios of Letterio Calapai (a part of Stanley William Hayter's Paris Atelier 17) and Robert Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop.[13] Despite the difficulty African Americans face in entering the art scene, as there is often a lack of access to dealers and curators, Amos persevered and received her M.A. from New York University in 1966. While at NYU, she became reacquainted with Hale Woodruff, who was a professor there at the time.

At the age of 23, Amos had a meeting with Woodruff for a critique of her prints, and he told her about Spiral. The group was a collective of approximately fifteen prominent African American artists, founded in 1963 by Romare Bearden, Charles Alston, Norman Lewis, and Hale Woodruff. The group was interested in discussions of Négritude, a philosophy born out of opposition to French colonialism and centered around encouraging a common racial identity for black Africans around the world. Spiral was formed out of the Works Progress Administration and the Harlem Renaissance. Woodruff took some of her work to one of their meetings at their rented storefront, and the members of the group liked her work enough to invite her to join as their first and only female member.[14] Amos thought it strange that no other women artists were asked to join the group, even though they were acquainted with the members of Spiral.

Amos felt that joining Spiral would be useful because she did not know many artists in New York at the time. Amos worked full-time as a designer during the day, and studied full-time in the evenings, and made time to paint on the weekends. In May 1965, Spiral rented a gallery space at 147 Christopher Street, where the group had their first and only exhibit. Amos displayed an etching entitled Without a Feather Boa, which has since been lost. This etching was a nude self-portrait bust that depicted Amos "staring indifferently at the viewer from behind a pair of dark sunglasses."[15] Prior to Spiral, Amos was resistant towards the idea of "black art" and galleries that only showed work by African Americans, but she came to understand that these were often the only options available to black artists at the time, and also learned how to integrate race and sex politics into her work without her work becoming dominated by the process of political engagement.

Spiral stopped meeting shortly after 1965, when rising rent prices lost them their gallery and meeting space on the Lower East Side. During the 1970s, Amos went on to teach textile design at the Newark School of Fine and Industrial Arts, weaving on her own looms at Threadbare, a yarn and weaving shop on Bleecker Street and thrived as a weaver due to the propagation of weaving and fabric art within the Feminist Art Movement.[13]

Amos originated and co-hosted Show of Hands, a crafts show for WGBH-TV in Boston in 1977–79, and later became a Professor at the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University.[16]

Amos designed the memorial for Ralph David Abernathy a civil rights leader and activist, which is made up of four installations and is located in the Ralph David Abernathy Memorial Park in Atlanta, GA.[17]

Her piece Measuring Measuring (1995)[18] was used as the front cover image for the African American women artists historical text, Creating Their Own Image: The History of the African American Women Artists by Lisa E. Farrington.[19]

Style[edit]

Amos explores boundaries between self-portraiture, appropriation, and artistic ownership. She challenges the conventional idea of a self portrait. Most of her work depict an enlarged figure of herself.[20]Amos combined printmaking, painting and textile in her self-referential works, usually on linen, large scale, and unframed. She used acrylic paint, etching, silkscreen, collagraph, photo transfer effects with iron-on fabric, and African textiles. She borrowed schema, subject matter and symbols from European art while pictorially quoting artists like Paul Gauguin, Malcolm Morley, Lucian Freud, and Henri Matisse. Amos demonstrated the deconstructive license of postmodernist works in her use of applications from several disciplines on the same picture plane, making a "seamless work of art."[16]

As well as bordering her paintings with African fabric, Amos sewed, appliqued, embroidered and occasionally quilted with her own weavings, Kente cloth and batiks.[21] The scale and textural layering of the work resembles forms often found in European prestige tapestries and the African diaspora.[16]

Art museum director, Sharon Patton, summarizes her oeuvre thus:

[Amos's] sequence of paintings is anecdotal, but the objective of each is the same: to argue constructively against norms in the field of art as well as society. Her responses are reactive and reflexive; she ably uses her paintings as a means to analyze and assess cultural production, authorship, meaning and consumption. Amos is quintessentially postmodern because she questions the validity of canonical traditions and institutions that for so long have been biased against the inclusion of women and artists of color, especially blacks.[16]

Among the variety of mixed media that Amos uses in her work, the main subject is often figurative. Unlike many figurative artists Amos did not like to paint the nude figure. She liked painting clothed figures because she believed that painting the nude figure is sexist, and that clothing shows culture.[14]

During her time at Central School of Art, Amos studied abstract painting, and produced some Abstract Expressionist work for a period. After a while she deemed abstraction too easy and arbitrary, so she returned to painting the figure because it was more challenging. This influence remained present in her figurative work.[14]

Emma Amos's work is deeply rooted in themes of race and gender[22], and she uses her art as a means of exploring these issues and promoting social and political change.[23] Through her use of personal and family history, cultural symbols, and powerful imagery, Amos creates works that speak to the experiences of people of color and challenge societal biases and stereotypes.

Amos used her art to explore themes of race and sex, contending that the very act of being black while an artist is political in nature. Through her work, she exhibits her investigations into the otherness through exploring white male artists[24] - she cited well-known White, male artists, such as Picasso and Gauguin, who were praised for including subjects of color into their work, while African American artists were seemingly expected to paint other subjects of color. Amos incorporated white subjects into her art, particularly images of the Ku Klux Klan, challenging this assumption.[13][25] She also explored otherness through the notion of desire, the dark body versus the white body, and racism.

It is also notable to mention that Amos incorporated the theme of race in her work through the use of imagery and symbols that are associated with African American culture. For example, in her paintings, she often includes elements such as African masks, textiles, and other cultural symbols to reference the African diaspora and the cultural heritage of people of color.

Solo Exhibitions[edit]

Alexander Gallery, Atlanta, GA, 1960.

Davis Fine Arts Gallery, West Virginia State College, 1974.

Art Salon, New York, NY, 1979.

Isobel Neal Gallery, Chicago, IL, 1988.

Clemson University Gallery, Genoa, Italy, 1989.

Douglass College Women Artists Series, NJ, 1989.

Newark Museum, Newark, NJ, 1990.

Bronx Museum, NY, 1991.

McIntosh Gallery, Atlanta, GA, 1991.

College of Wooster Art Museum, Wooster, OH, 1993.

Changing the Subject, Art in General, New York, NY, 1994.

Sherry Washington Gallery, Detroit, MI, 1996.

Emma Amos: Thinking Paint, Kenyon College, OH, 2001.

Emma Amos: New to New York: A Midcareer Survey, New York, NY, 2002.

Emma Amos: Paintings and Prints, 1983-2003, Antioch College, 2004.

Group Exhibitions[edit]

Dream Singers, Story Tellers: An African American Presence, New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, 1992.

Reading Prints, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 1992.

Engaged Vision, Terry Dintenfass Gallery, New York, NY, 1994.

Romare Bearden and Friends: Emma Amos, Charles Alston, Herbert Gentry, Norman Lewis, Alitash Kebede Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, 1994.

Interamerican De Artistas Plastico, Museum de las Artes, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico, 1994.

A Women's Place, Monmouth Museum, Lincroft, NJ, 1996.

Six Artists: The 1990s, New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, 1996.

Bearing Witness: Contemporary Works by African American Women Artists, Atlanta, GA, 1996.

Thinking Print: Books to Billboards, 1980-95, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 1996.

Feminism[edit]

The retrospective Emma Amos: Color Odyssey appeared at the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute in Utica, New York in 2021[26]

Amos admitted that being from the South, as an African American woman, she had always been aware of the adversities she faced in her everyday life. However, in relation to Feminism, Amos did not become actively involved until the late 1980s.[14] Before this time, in the early 1970s, while raising children, Amos was invited to join a Feminist Group of artists that met in New York City parks. When choosing whether or not to attend, Amos stated, "From what I heard of feminist discussions in the park, the experiences of black women of any class were left out. I came from a line of working women who were not only mothers, but breadwinners, cultured, educated, and who had been treated as equals by their black husbands. I felt I could not afford to spend precious time away from studio and family to listen to stories so far removed from my own."[10]

It was not until the early 1980s, after she began teaching at Mason Gross of Arts at Rutgers University in New Jersey where she decided to participate in the feminist group Heresies. Within this group, women worked together, from all backgrounds, to publish pieces of artwork and writing of unknown women artists, published in a series of magazines and discussions. When speaking on the group, she declared, "And that’s what Heresies became for me. All of my disdain for white feminists disappeared, because we were all in the same boat. We just came to the boat from different spaces."[27] She edited the collective's journal Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics.[28]

Emma Amos was also a member of the anonymous feminist group Guerilla Girls and used the pseudonym Zora Neale Hurston.[29] Amos was also briefly involved with A.I.R. or Artists in Residency Gallery,[30] known for being the first artist-run gallery for women in the United States of America.[31] For numerous years, Amos also attended meetings with the group, Fantastic Women in the Arts. This group also explored the artwork and writings of many female artists, but also focused on how the revolution in the 1960s and 1970s, concerning education on racism and sexism, failed to actually make any difference for black Americans or women. It is in this group that Amos discussed the privilege of white Americans, and how that was evident in the arts in everyday life.[10] Amos stayed active in her involvement in these issues and providing education to younger generations, however, keeping groups going seemed to her to be the hardest challenge.[10] Amos felt that "artists who are not white, young, and straight, and who are openly political, and feminist, seem to still be on the margins. [She] hope[s] we all will see more change soon."[10]

Legacy[edit]

(The information originally provided in this section wasn't correlated to Amos's legacy, so I edited this section to incorporate a more accurate description of her legacy.)

Emma Amos is an important figure in contemporary American art. She is frequently exhibited and her work has made a significant impact on the art world and beyond. Emma Amos's legacy is one of artistic excellence and social and political activism. [32]Throughout her career,As a member of the artist collective Spiral, Amos has been involved in numerous causes throughout her career, including civil rights, women's rights, and LGBT rights. Her work has helped to promote understanding and awareness of these issues and to inspire change in society.

Through her art and her activism, she has made a lasting contribution to the art world and to society at large. She has a pioneering role as an African American woman artist. Throughout her career, she has faced many challenges and obstacles as a person of color in the art world,[22] but she has persevered and has become a role model for other artists of color. Her work has helped to open up new opportunities for artists of color and promote greater representation and diversity in the art world.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Access Library Resource — UW–Madison Libraries". patron.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  2. ^ "Access Library Resource — UW–Madison Libraries". patron.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  3. ^ "Emma Amos". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  4. ^ Klacsmann, Karen T. "Emma Amos (b. 1937)". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2017-03-14.
  5. ^ "Oral history interview with Emma Amos, 2011 November 19-26". www.aaa.si.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-02.
  6. ^ "Access Library Resource — UW–Madison Libraries". patron.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  7. ^ a b Murray, Al (1968-10-03). "Interview with Emma Amos". aaa.si.edu. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  8. ^ a b c Farris, Phoebe (1999). Women artists of color : a bio-critical sourcebook to 20th century artists in the Americas. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 231–238. ISBN 9780313091117. OCLC 607117768. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  9. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (2006). Creating Black Americans: African-American history and its meanings, 1619 to the present. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 418. ISBN 9-780195137552. OCLC 607522345.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Lippard, Lucy R. (1991). "Floating Falling Landing: An Interview with Emma Amos". Art Papers. 15 (6): 13–16.
  11. ^ a b c d Marter, Joan (2006-10-20). "Amos, Emma". Grove Art Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t2021445.
  12. ^ Farrington, Lisa E. (2005). Creating Their Own Image: the history of African-American women artists. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 157–163. ISBN 9780195167214. OCLC 1148590525 – via Internet Archive.
  13. ^ a b c d Farrington, Lisa E. "Emma Amos: Art as Legacy." Woman’s ArtJournal 28, no. 1 (2007): 3-11.
  14. ^ a b c d Thompson, Mildred. "Interview: Emma Amos." Art Papers 19 (1999): 21-23. Print.
  15. ^ Farrington, Lisa E. (2007-01-01). "Emma Amos: Art as Legacy". Woman's Art Journal. 28 (1): 3–11. JSTOR 20358105.
  16. ^ a b c d Patton, Sharon F. "Emma Amos: Thinking Paint" catalogue notes, Oxford University Press, 1998. Print.
  17. ^ "City of Atlanta, Mayor's Office of Cultural Affairs | We Will Not Forget". Retrieved 2021-12-02.
  18. ^ "Measuring, Measuring | Birmingham Museum of Art". 2021-11-09. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  19. ^ "Creating Their Own Image". Hurston/Wright Foundation. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  20. ^ Wolfskill, Phoebe (2016-09-01). "Love and Theft in the Art of Emma Amos". Archives of American Art Journal. 55 (2): 46–65. doi:10.1086/689715. ISSN 0003-9853.
  21. ^ Farrington, Lisa (2005). Creating Their Own Image. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 161.
  22. ^ a b "How Emma Amos's Art and Activism Powerfully Confronted Racism and Sexism". The Dallas Art Dealers Association. 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  23. ^ "Amos, Emma | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  24. ^ "Document unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  25. ^ Weathers, Diane, Essence. Emma Amos: `Painting white'. Sep 1994, Vol 25. Issue 5.
  26. ^ "Emma Amos: Color Odyssey". Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
  27. ^ The Heretics. Dir. Joan Braderman. Prod. Crescent Diamond. No More Nice Girls Productions, 2009. Web.
  28. ^ Durón, Maximilíano (2021-04-30). "How Emma Amos's Art and Activism Powerfully Confronted Racism and Sexism". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2022-02-04.
  29. ^ "America Goddam :: AEQAI". Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  30. ^ "NY ARTIST PROGRAM". A.I.R. Retrieved 2021-12-02.
  31. ^ "Oral history interview with Emma Amos, 2011 November 19-26". www.aaa.si.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-02.
  32. ^ "Preview unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2022-12-19.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]