Wednesday 8 December 2021

FIVE UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUMS ACQUIRE ARTWORK FROM THE COLLECTION OF SOULS GROWN DEEP



THE FIVE MOUTS OF TECHNOLOGY TO DISCOVER ART COLLECTION AND THE SOULS GROW DEEP.


TAGS: MODERATION ARTISTS GALL SHOWS


The Souls Grown Deep Foundation and Community Partnership have announced the Blanton Museum of Art (University of Texas at Austin), the Hampton University Museum, the Hood Museum of Art (Dartmouth College), Princeton University The Art Museum, as well as the RISD Museum have made purchases in its collection. of the art works of Black artists from the Southern United States, including Mary Lee Bendolph, Sally Mae Pettway Mixon, Thornton Dial, Lonnie Holley, and Purvis Young.


The Hampton, Hood, Princeton, and RISD museums will also partner with the Foundation to offer paid internships for BIPOC graduates during the Spring 2022 semester, marking the fourth collection of the Foundation's Internship Grant Program.


With this discovery, Souls Grown Deep has now placed more than 500 works by more than 110 artists in more than 30 important museum collections across the country, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art; National Gallery of Art; San Francisco Fine Arts Museums; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Brooklyn Museum; Dallas Museum of Art; and others. The Foundation's Collection Transfer Program is an important part of its work to represent the growing representation of these artists in the art history catalog by promoting public access to these works and related exhibitions, research, publication, and programs. It also directly supports live artists, including Louisiana Bendolph, Mary Lee Bendolph, Lonnie Holley, Joe Minter, and Sally Mae Pettway Mixon, with cash prizes through the Fundamentals Rewards Foundation.


“We are very proud of the performance of these top artists who enter the country's most prestigious collections at colleges and universities. Their students will have the opportunity to learn directly from these activities not only through exhibitions, but also from new courses and programs, as well as a paid internship program, creating new ways for students to enter and succeed in the museum field, ”said Dr. Maxwell L. Anderson, president of Souls Grown Deep.


Raina Lampkins-Fielder, curator of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, added: "In order for these black South American artists to receive the recognition they deserve for their contributions to American culture, it is important to give new generations of leaders the opportunity to explore and understand artistic history."


In addition to the new acquisitions, the Hood, Hampton, Princeton, and RISD museums are announced as the fourth group of institutions participating in the Souls Grown Deep Foundation's Internship Grant program, which works with the Foundation to provide paid internships for BIPOC graduates. Spring 2022. semester. The internship program, launched in 2019, works with leading museums that have landed jobs at Souls Grown Deep to support professional development opportunities for museum professionals, creating a way for students to pursue careers in the arts industry. It includes the various departments of the museum including curatorial, conservation, education, etc., internships that provide financial and professional support, vocational training opportunities to lead training and community programs through in-depth involvement and activities acquired by their respective institutions.


Alumni have selected or contributed to major exhibitions of this work, including Souls Grown Deep: Artists of the African American South at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; Cosmologies from the Tree of Life: Art from South America at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; He Knew Where He Was Going: Gee's Bend Quilts and Civil Rights at the Baltimore Museum of Art; and In the Presence of Our Ancestors: Southern Ideas for Native American Art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Two former interns, Starasea Camara (formerly of Our Ancestors in Mia) and Akili Davis (who assisted in caring for Souls Grown Deep at PMA), have since been hired by Souls Grown Deep as Curatorial Associates in support of Gee's Bend. The Cultural Trail, and others have either continued at their own center or pursued other forms of work inside and outside the arts.


Lampkins-Fielder continued, “The graduates of our program and those who can now access these works of art in Princeton, RISD, Dartmouth, and UT Austin are set to advance critical discussions in their field, whether directors, art historians, or spokespersons. common benefits. ”


More information about the works of art and museums obtained from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation follows below.


Blanton Museum of Art


The Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin received two quilts by Arie Pettway and Sally Mae Pettway Mixon at Souls Grown Deep. With the largest community group in Central Texas, comprising more than 21,000 objects, Blanton is known for its extensive hold on contemporary American and contemporary art, which includes a long-standing commitment to black and female artists. Adding these quilts to its catch will enable Blanton to highlight the fundamental impact of these works of art on contemporary artists throughout the United States, from Diedrick Brackens * to Jeffrey Gibson.


The two outfits will be presented at the Convention: New Discovery of Black Black Artists, a show scheduled to open in December 2021 and made possible with the overwhelming support of an anonymous donor. The Pettway quilts will feature interviews with the great works of Emma Amos, Kevin Beasley, Robert Pruitt, Deborah Roberts, Lorna Simpson, Cauleen Smith, and Nari Ward, among others. Upcoming publication will also have a bearing on the new scholarship for these projects.


Hood Museum of Art


The Hood Museum of Art on the Dartmouth College campus in Hanover, NH, has acquired 10 works of art at Souls Grown Deep, including L.

 

 

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