Amazon Price: $22.76
List Price: $29.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Rutgers University Press
Amazon Marketplace: 36
new & used starting at $4.95
|
Buy at Amazon.com
|
Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Arts & Photography -> History & Criticism -> Regional -> African American
Subjects -> Arts & Photography -> History & Criticism -> Regional -> United States
Subjects -> Arts & Photography -> History & Criticism -> General AAS
Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1
Average rating: 5.0 of 5
Editorial Review:
"Paul Jones is a passionate collector with a very good eye. He [has] sought out very good examples of excellent artists who have played prominent roles in American art."—Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, Chief Curator, Smithsonian American Art MuseumThe Paul R. Jones Collection is one of the oldest, largest, and most comprehensive holdings of African American art in the world. Jones, who was named by Art and Antiques as one of the top one hundred collectors in the United States, began buying paintings, prints, photographs, and sculpture four decades ago and has now amassed over fifteen hundred works, many of them by well-known artists. Among the sixty-six represented in A Century of African American Art are Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Henry Ossawa Tanner, James VanDerZee, Carrie Mae Weems, and Hale Woodruff.
Lavishly illustrated with over one hundred color photographs, this book provides an important resource for the study of the works included in the Jones collection, the artists who created them, as well as the social and historical contexts that engendered them. The volume brings together ten essays, which examine four issues in American art: portraiture and realism in relation to abstract expressionism, the implications of color, the role of narrative, and the concept of multiple originals. Each essay makes the intentional effort to de-race African American art—not to strip the work of its idiomatic cultural footing, but rather to situate it within the larger picture of the nation’s history and cultural traditions.
Reflecting the diversity of the collection itself, the contributors come from wide-ranging fields including American art, African American art, African art, art conservation, color theory, photography, and sociology. Together, the eclectic selections make a major contribution to recontextualizing African American scholarship in the broadest sense, while also providing important insights into the Jones collection.
Contributors are Marcia R. Cohen, Diana McClintock, Ann Eden Gibson, Winston Kennedy, Debra Hess Norris, Ikem Stanley Okoye, Sharon Pruitt, Carla Williams, and Margaret Andersen.