A sculptor and painter working out of Brooklyn, NY. A member of one of the pioneering art collectives, Weusi, Neals believes ‘a lot of black people went to sleep,’ he believes ‘people think the fight is over, but it’s not.’ He cites the media sensationalization of the small fraction of successful African Americans which helps to create the illusion of progress when, in reality, ‘the fight continues.’
His artwork has been exhibited at institutions, museums, galleries, universities, and libraries across the country. His works are included in public collections in the USA and abroad in such places as The Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C.; Howard University, Washington, D.C.; The Studio Museum in Harlem, NY; Ghana National Museum, Ghana; Columbia Museum, Columbia, SC; and in private collections including David Dinkins, Former Mayor of NYC; Hon. John Lewis, Congressman, Georgia; celebrities — Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Gil Noble, producer ‘Like It Is’ NY; among others.
Ron Ollie is an art collector living and collecting in New Jersey. He has been collecting for several years and cites the abstract painter Ed Clark as one of his mentors, giving him direction and a sense of appreciation for the work being collected.
Ollie speaks about the dearth of scholarship for the collector looking to build his collection of Black art, which has the paradoxical effect of creating an interesting, definitely more intimate, collector/artist relationship. This atmosphere he hopes will foster a future of Black art collecting that is more widespread, and helps bring more stylistically varied artists to the fore.
Howardena Lindell is an abstract artist, activist, writer and educator working out of New York City. In her artwork, she challenges propaganda and fights racism and injustice. She is also concerned with identity and cultural heritage. Her work is highly personal as she records her own struggles as an African America woman trying to find her sense of self in a society where overt and subtle discrimination conflict with individualism and equality. Her career has been prolific, not only in terms of her art-making, but also as a writer.
For many years she has been an activist in the art community. Since the 1970s, she has published groundbreaking studies that document the lack of representation of artists of color in the major museums and galleries. She has written numerous articles attacking censorship, racism and violence.
An artist, activist, philanthropist, poet, author and gallery owner. Simmons strives in his works and projects to speak for ‘those who have been excluded from the mainstream.’ Simmons started this mission with his first gallery project, Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, co-founded with brother and entrepreneur Russell Simmons, and he continues it with his selection of unconventional and underrepresented artists at his Corridor Gallery in Brooklyn.
Simmons believes that there needs to be more support, both within African American community, as well as externally, for artists who choose to express themselves in less conventional mediums and styles.
Michael Singletary is a versatile artist working in styles ranging from collage to more photo realistic figure painting. His works represent a great array of the Black experience in America. His pop art has gathered much critical acclaim and his works have been showcased and published in several collections over the years. CBS’ Dan Rather lauds Singletary’s work as “an impressive breadth of human experience, which never fails to move with the vibrancy of life.” Singletary credits his versatility to an early start.
He also credits his variety in subject matter to an early exposure to a deep span of human truth, stories his relatives would share of the disheartening realities of the south, and often racially charged social interactions.
An abstract painter working and living in New York City. Smith’s works are epic masterpieces varying in feel from nebulous star-field landscapes to deep under water corral beds. While understanding the need for a universal approach to art, Smith believes that any work she creates has its roots in the very fact that she is an African American.
Smith also believes that more should be done to encourage black artists who stray from the expected afro-centric themes, lamenting the lack of celebration for inspirational artists such as the African American abstractionist Norman Lewis.
An illustrator working and living in Brooklyn, New York. He hopes his work will help show young African American kids that they are part of the larger conversation of american life. Smith believes that the main reason some black kids show no interest in reading is because they are not presented with stories that represent them, hence they cannot relate.
Smith’s works are often representational and one of his main goals is a reinvention of the status of the Black male in American society; expanding the public perception beyond what is seen in music videos and crime dramas.
A New York City-based painter with African roots, born and raised in Ghana. Tafa’s background allows him a broad view of the Black experience, both within America and around the Diaspora; this view is a grand benefit to him, obvious in his vibrant canvases bursting with life and color.
TAFA believes that the Black experience draws on itself in various aspects and as such, allows for a richer history which painters like himself are documenting in their work. He cites the parallels between the history of struggle on the African continent and that of blacks in America.
A Pittsburgh native and New York resident, Ann Tanksley has enjoyed a long and illustrious professional career highlighted by numerous honors and artistic achievements. A graduate of the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University) in Pittsburgh, PA, she also studied at the Art Student League, Parsons School of Design, the Printmaking Workshop and the New School for Social Research all in New York, NY.
Notable masters with whom she has studied include Norman Lewis, Balcom Green, Sam Rosenberg, Robert Blackburn and Paulette Singer. One of her major accomplishments was the creation and publication of a masterful portfolio of monoprints based on the writings of Zora Neale Hurston entitled, ‘Images of Zora’. Described by the writer Maya Angelou as ‘dazzling’, the prints were unveiled at two New York exhibitions and went on a national tour.
A look back at the last fifty years in African American art, Colored Frames is an unflinching exploration of influences, inspirations and experiences of black artists. Beginning at the height of the Civil Rights Era and leading up to the present, it is a naked and truthful look at often ignored artists and their progenies.