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English Pages [100] Year 1992
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HOWARDENA PINDELL
Paintings and Drawings
Howardena Pindell (1980). Photo by Camille Billops, © 1980
HOWARDENA PINDELL
ExhibitsUSA” A NATIONAL DIVISION OF MID-AMERICA ARTS ALLIANCE
ExhibitsUSA, a national division of Mid-America Arts Alliance, is sponsored by the Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund. Mid-America Arts Alliance is assisted by its six partner state agencies, the National Endowment for the Arts, and private contributors.
Contents
Preface Georgia Coopersmith . 5 Acknowledgements Mary Kennedy McCabe.7
On the cover: Autobiography: East/West: Waterfall, 1983
Foreword Grace Stanislaus.8
(number 20 in the
A Resolutely Globaljoumey: The Life
exhibition).
and Work of Howardena Pindell Holland Cotter . 10 Synthesis and Integration in the Work of Howardena Pindell, 1972-1992 Lowery Stokes Sims . 13 Howardena Pindell: Some Reminiscences and a Chronology Howardena Pindell, Loma Simpson, & Georgia Coopersmith.20 Howardena Pindell: Paintings and Drawings A Checklist of the Exhibition.24 Plates with commentary by the artist.28 Notes and Resources.92
© 1992 Roland Gibson Gallery at Potsdam College of the State University of New York. All rights reserved. Artist’s Statements © Howardena Pindell. Photography (unless otherwise credited) © D. James Dee, New York
ISBN 0-942746-18-X $27.50
Preface
Georgia Coopersmith Longwood Fine Arts Center The individuals and
artist’s written and visual
editorial help and for coor¬
have come about: the
organizations who have
work. To this end, we have
dinating the receipt of the
National Endowment for
contributed to this exhibi¬
provided a comprehensive
catalogue materials, and
the Arts, New York State
tion were bound in a
educational package to
Richard McClintock for
Council on the Arts, the
common commitment to
accompany the exhibition
conceiving and executing
Andy Warhol Foundation,
represent the artist and her
and the artist’s personal
the design and production
the Kraft Foundation, and
ideas in a more complete
reading list.
of the catalogue. Ellen
ExhibitsUSA. The State
manner then previously
• To evaluate the impact of
Giusti is credited with
University College at
possible. In our initial
the exhibition on visitors;
designing the evaluative
Potsdam and Longwood
meetings and discussions
whether the exhibition and
materials.
about the design of the
related resources served its
exhibition, four objectives
intended purpose “to
College student intemjodi
tive support on behalf on
were identified:
inform and decode the
Comins is thanked for her
the project.
• To travel the first solo
artist’s work.” We have
perseverance, exhibition
exhibition of Pindell’s
provided two means to
coordinator Alyssa
wishes to note the great
work. In addition, this
measure audience
Verruso for her conscien¬
contribution provided by
exhibition marks the first
response. The first asks
tious follow-through, and
the artist herself. She has
retrospective exhibition of
for visitor’s comments in a
Interim Director Diana
provided not only the
breadth. The two-and-a-
format that is incorporated
Cooper for undertaking
artwork and text, but
half year tour will bring
in the exhibition. The
the responsibility for the
generous amounts of time,
Pindell’s work to the atten¬
other is a quantifiable
execution of many
labor, and perceptive
tion of new and diverse
exit survey, randomly
arrangements.
insight on every aspect of
audiences.
administered.
• To incorporate, for the
In achieving our goals,
College are acknowledged
In addition, at Potsdam
We appreciated the
for providing administra¬
Finally, the organizer
this exhibition. For her
understanding and
great attention to concept,
first time, Pindell’s writ¬
we have had much help
professionalism of Mary
theory, and process we are
ings on art, self, and poli¬
from many individuals
Kennedy McCabe and the
deeply obligated to
tics with her visual work.
who made significant
staff at ExhibitsUSA,
Howardena Pindell.
The exhibition catalogue
contributions of time and
whose partnership has
contains statements by the
talent to the program. We
enabled a higher caliber of
artist about her sources for
acknowledge Lowery Sims
exhibition.
each painting, and
for providing the major
resources that have influ¬
essay on Howardena
to the exhibition for their
enced her conceptual
Pindell and her work,
generosity in allowing us to
development. In the
Grace Stanislaus for the
borrow works from their
exhibition itself, we have
foreword, Holland Cotter
collections for an extended
included wall labels with
for his insights, and Susan
period.
text drawn from the
Stoops for her jacket notes.
artist’s statements.
Nashormeh Lindo is
July 1992
We thank all the lenders
With particular grati¬ tude, we thank the organi¬
• To disseminate informa¬
commended for fine design
zations and foundations
tion related to resources
and preparation of the
that provided financial
and readings that have
educational materials. We
support for the exhibition,
informed and inspired the
thank Naomi Nelson for
without which it would not
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
5
ExhibitsUSA"
St'
A NATIONAL DIVISION OF MID-AMERICA ARTS ALLIANCE
ExhibitsUSA, a national division of Mid-America Arts Alliance, was created in 1988 to meet the growing demand from small and mid-sized museums, university galleries, and community art centers around the United States for exhibitions that offer afforda¬ bility without compromised quality. Our mission is to distribute and promote highquality visual arts programs of local, regional, national, and international signifi¬ cance; to provide access to arts experiences among the broadest spectrum of our population; and to nurture the development and under¬ standing of various art forms. ExhibitsUSA Staff Mary Kennedy McCabe, Director Patricia Fitzpatrick, Registrar Kathy Stump, Education Coordinator Edana Elder, Acting Marketing Coordinator Kristen Gladsky, Curatorial Assistant Eric Lindveit, Preparator Christopher Ketchie, Assistant Preparator Noel Ashby, Technical Assistant Jana Brunner, Technical Assistant
Mid-America Arts Alliance, founded in 1972, is a private non-profit arts organization serving a sixstate region. Its partners include the state arts agencies of Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Okla¬ homa, and Texas, the National Endowment for the Arts, private foundations, and individual contributors. Today its activities encom¬ pass regional, national, and international performing and visual arts projects, specializ¬ ing in touring, related services, and artist fellowship programs.
Mid-America Arts Alliance Board of Directors Wallace Richardson, Lincoln, Nebraska, Chairman Anthony Radich, St. Loins, Missouri, Vice Chairman Harolyn O’Brien, Leawood, Kansas, Secretary Marian Andersen, Omaha, Nebraska, Treasurer Christopher Abele, Kansas City, Missouri John Paul Batiste, Austin, Texas Noland Blass, Little Rock, Arkansas Ann Buchanan, Wichita, Kansas Jennifer S. Clark, Omaha, Nebraska Carolyn Dillon, Hutchinson, Kansas Elizabeth K. Doenges, Tulsa, Oklahoma Alejandrina Drew, El Paso, Texas Robert Duncan, Lincoln, Nebraska Suzy Finesilver, San Antonio, Texas Lillie Fontenot, Houston, Texas Joanie Holt, Midland, Texas Dorothy Ilgen, Topeka, Kansas Donald A. Johnston, Lawrence, Kansas Alexander C. Kemper, Kansas City, Missouri MaryLanden, Omaha, Nebraska Linda Lee, Topeka, Kansas Carl McCaffree, Shawnee Mission, Kansas Adair Margo, El Paso, Texas Patricia B. Meadows, Dallas, Texas Dr. Helen Nunn, Blytheville, Arkansas Dr. James C. Olson, Kansas City, Missouri Loren G. Olsson, Scottsbluff, Nebraska Dr. Thomas D. Pawley III, Jefferson City, Missouri Betty Price, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Elizabeth Pruet, El Dorado, Arkansas Bill Puppione, Little Rock, Arkansas George A. Singer, Tulsa, Oklahoma James Tolbert, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Art Thompson, Lincoln, Nebraska Obert M. Undem, Fayetteville, Arkansas Kathleen P. Westby, Tulsa, Oklahoma Jerome M. Westheimer Sr., Ardmore, Oklahoma Henry Moran, Executive Director Will Conner, Chief Operating Officer Edeen Martin, Director of Programs, President of ExhibitsUSA
6
HOWARDENA PINDELL
Acknowledgements
Maty Kennedy McCabe ExhibitsUSA We are pleased to present
to Mr. Howard Pindell,
effort of many individuals:
the Arts, and private
the national tour of Howar-
Heath Gallery, June Kelly
Diana Cooper, interim
contributors.
deria Pindell: A Retrospective.
Gallery, Bellevue Hospital,
director of the Roland
The works included in this
George N’Namdi Gallery,
Gibson Art Gallery, State
ExhibitsUSA staff for their
exhibition represent
William and Gloriajohn-
University of New York at
commitment to excellence
Pindell’s skillful manipu¬
son, Dr. Hills Howard,
Potsdam; Gary Ray Buga-
in preparing this exhibi¬
lation of multi-media and
and Dr. Dexter Fields and
rich of Crozier Fine Arts;
tion for touring. Thanks to
her quest to create works
Dr. Margaret Betts.
Nashormeh Lindo, educa¬
Patricia Fitzpatrick,
tion programs manager at
Kathy Stump, Kristen Gladsky, Edana Elder,
which are not merely
It has been a pleasure to
Finally, thanks to the
about artmaking, but
work with Georgia
the Schomberg Center for
about living life. We are
Coopersmith, director of
Research in Black Culture;
Eric Lindveit, Christopher
most grateful to Howar-
the Longwood Fine Arts
Naomi Nelson of the Studio
Ketchie, Noel Ashby, and
dena for her remarkable
Center, Longwood
Museum in Harlem; Ellen
Jana Brunner. In addition,
contribution to contempo¬
College, Virginia, who
Giusti, a private consultant;
thanks to the Board of
rary art and for her
curated this exhibition and
Richard McClintock, direc¬
Directors and staff of Mid-
gracious assistance in
first brought it to our
tor of publications at
America Arts Alliance for
organizing this
attention. We appreciate
Hampden-Sydney College;
their ongoing support of
retrospective.
the fine work of the
and Susan Hyde, an inde¬
ExhibitsUSA.
contributors to this cata¬
pendent graphic designer.
This exhibition would not have been possible
logue: Lowery Sims, asso¬
without the cooperation of
ciate curator of 20th-
division of Mid-America
those who have generously
century art at the Metro¬
Arts Alliance, is supported
lent Howardena’s artwork
politan Museum of Art;
by the Lila Wallace-
for the duration of the
Grace Stanislaus, director
Reader’s Digest Fund, the
tour. Our sincerest thanks
of the Bronx Museum; and
H&R Block Foundation,
ExhibitsUSA, a national
Holland Cotter, critic for
the Samuel H. Kress Foun¬
Art in America and The New
dation, the Phillips Petro¬
York Times. An exhibition
leum Foundation, and the
of this magnitude would
Union Pacific Foundation.
not be possible without the
Mid-America Arts Alliance is assisted by its six partner state arts agencies, the National Endowment for
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
7
Foreword Grace Stanislaus Bronx Museum of Arts A successful retrospective
first exhibition in which
numbered pin dots made
Extended periods of
exhibition offers the public
the artist is given full voice
from templates. Pindell’s
travel and immersion in
a visual biography: a
through the inclusion of
work is now polarized
non-Westem cultures have
selected body of work by
her writings on art and
between those that are
opened an aperture for
which to chart and to assess
politics. This exhibition
elegantly refined and
Pindell to understand the
an artist’s professional and
provides the appropriate
focussed on the texturatity
global dimensions of the
personal growth. The
vocabulary with which we
of surfaces overlaid with
social and political issues
Roland Gibson Gallery
can transcribe the experi¬
acrylic, oil, perfume, glit¬
addressed in her work.
has undertaken a daunting
ences deeply imprinted in
ter, cut and painted post¬
Numerous trips
challenge in organizing a
the fabric of Pindell’s art
cards, and those that
abroad, to Africa, Japan,
retrospective of the work
and life: art training inter¬
address harsher social and
India, South America,
of Howardena Pindell.
mixed with consciousness-
political realities: homeless¬
Europe and the Carib¬
How do you select from
raising lessons on racism
ness, AIDS, the ravages of
bean, have also provided
and make publicly compre¬
and sexism at Boston
war, genocide, sexism,
a critical source of artistic
hensible twenty years in the
University and Yale
xenophobia, and apart¬
and spiritual replenish¬
life of a highly prolific
University; participation
heid. The sharp-edged,
ment. The works based
artist? How do you sensi¬
in the Civil Rights and
spitfire commentary in
on her travels are rich in
tively unravel the myriad
women’s movement and
Pindell’s recent work and
allusions to memory, recol¬
facets of a complex and
the eventual break with the
publications have re-
lection, and the past. They
mature human being?
latter because of racism in
emerged from the activist
attempt to communicate a
Pindell has participated in
the ranks; firsthand expe¬
years of the 1960s and
sense of place: glitter remi¬
over three hundred exhibi¬
rience of institutionally-
1970s, when her astute
niscent of a waterfall in
tions nationally and inter¬
sanctioned, exclusionary'
social and political
South America or
nationally; has received
practices at the Museum of
conscience was awakened.
perfume applied on the
numerous prestigious
Modern Art; travels
awards; has been reviewed
abroad that nurtured her
alternative and main¬
of a festival honoring a
in innumerable publica¬
artistically and spiritually;
stream publications,
Yoruba goddess, or the
tions and has herself writ¬
and a near-fatal car crash
Pindell has clearly stated
iconic image of an Indian
ten many articles on politi¬
that transformed her
her agenda for document¬
god or goddess that recol¬
cal and art-related issues.
body, mind, and spirit.
ing insidious racism and
lects spiritual meditation
discrimination. Guided
in a Buddhist shrine.
This is not Howardena
Compared to the more
In her writing in both
surface to elicit memories
Pindell’s first retrospec¬
recent political work,
by an outraged conscience,
Pindell’s travels have also
tive. It is, however, the
Pindell’s earlier mixed
she hasjangled the nerves
become an allegory for her
media works were quiet,
of many in the New York
spiritual journey; for a
subdued, cool, sensual.
art scene by fastidiously
quest to find a single cultu¬
Typically based on a grid
tracking and exposing
ral thread in her multicul¬
structure, they explored
their racist practices. This
tural ancestry and, more
nuanced color, tight,
form of agit-prop confron¬
generally, for the explora¬
movement, form on
tation through the printed
tion of how cultural iden¬
stained and painted
medium is a critical facet
tity is constructed and by
canvases and in serialized
of Pindell’s art that has yet
whom. “I wanted to do
imagery of colored or
to be thoroughly assessed.
autobiographical paint-
8
HOWARDENA PINDELL
ings because I wanted to get to the guts of my own past,” is how Pindell explains the genesis of the ongoing series of large canvases tided Autobiography. Pindell, along with Adrian Piper, Faith Ringgold, Alma Thomas, and Betye Sarr, has been included on revisionist lists of Black women who have “made it” into the main¬ stream. But she continues to to be wary of these efforts at inclusivity and to distrust the New York art scene, having flushed out beneath its codified hierar¬ chical structure, designed for and by white males, an occasional bias toward white females and a histor¬ ical bias against artists of color. Undoubtedly, well beyond this exhibition, Howardena Pindell will use her art and critical writing as vehicles to expose racism, sexism, classism, and social injustice, recog¬ nizing that these forms of oppression have histori¬ cally had and will likely continue to have a strangle¬ hold on our culture.
Columbus, 1992. Detail.
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
9
A Resolutely Globaljoumey: The Life and Work of Howardena Pindell Holland Cotter media—painting, photo¬
the effect of African cloth
and her feminist involve¬
commentator has noted,
graphy, video—often
made from pounded fiber
ment proved to be the first
Howardena Pindell is a
returning to further
and natural dyes. That
decisive step on the road of
As more than one
traveller by temperament.
explore techniques used
Pindell’s work at this time
political activism which
This has many implica¬
earlier. The sense of
suggests both western and
Pindell still follows today.
tions for her life and art,
circling back gives her
non-western influences is
Pindell’s work through
but it clearly establishes
career a textured, woven
indicative of the mixed
the 70s is complex and
two general facts: she
quality, with apparent
cultural and spiritual path
richly varied, and
invites change and discon¬
false starts resolved in
she was already travelling.
tinuity; and she thrives on
unexpected ways, and
the idea of goals achieved.
loose ends left loose with
PindelTs own back¬ ground is polycultural to
These abstractions
included the use of innovative techniques for
from the early 70s are also
disassembling the painting
tantalizing implications
the closest Pindell’s work
medium into fragments
for the future.
ever came to the look of
and then reconstituting it
Minimalism—a style
in the form of collage. She
includes African, Euro¬
painting in the early 60s
which, with its frequent
would typically take plain
pean, Native American
is in a traditional—and
evocation of cool, inviol¬
paper, or paper she had
(specifically Seminole),
extremely accomplished—
able power, went entirely
painted with watercolor
Central American, and
figurative style, marked
against her grain. In fact,
or oil pastels, and hand-
Afro-Caribbean ancestry.
by a particular gift for
the darkness of her work at
punch it into tiny circles
Although raised a Chris¬
conveying the fall of light
this time may be attrib¬
with an ordinary paper-
tian, she is partjewish
on solid forms. As a gradu¬
uted to the fact that she
puncher. She gathered the
through a great¬
ate student at Yale, she
painted mosdy at night;
punched circles, often indi¬
grandfather, and has
continued in this vein but
her days were spent work¬
vidually numbered them
pursued both Buddhist and
also for the first time
ing in various curatorial
in ink, then glued them in
Hindu spiritual practices.
ventured into abstraction.
capacities at New York’s
confetti-like layers to sewn
Since leaving her home in
an unusual degree and
Her undergraduate
The stained paintings she
Museum of Modem Art.
sheets of graph paper,
Philadelphia in her teens to
did a few years after grad¬
Increasingly in the 70s she
board, or canvas.
attend Boston University,
uation remain stunning
favored the handmade,
she has travelled exten¬
today. On unstretched
process-oriented, even
tions, the results have a
sively in five continents. In
canvas, as many of her
craft-intensive approach
vaguely scientific air
With their inked nota¬
two and a half decades as a
paintings are, they have
to art that has proved to
(Pindell’s father, one notes,
professional artist, she has
the appearance of vast
be her natural bent. This
has a graduate degree in
worked in a variety of
dark fields from which
formal preference—a
statistics); at the same time
10
HOWARDENA PINDELL
light emanates; Ad Rein¬
kind of take-off on the
hardt’s “black paintings”
women’s-work-is-never-
are an acknowledged
done approach to art—
model. They also convey
found a response in the
the impression of pigment
nascent feminist move¬
having been beaten into
ment, with which for a
the surface rather than
time Pindell aligned
simply applied with a
herself. She was one of the
brush; in this they recall
founders of A.I.R. gallery,
they look remarkably
Modern Art, she visited
produced in the early 80s.
painterly. It as if Seurat’s
Africa, travelling through
Just before this time,
making collages from
little molecular strokes had
Kenya, Ghana, Nigeria,
however, two events effec¬
postcards and photos,
this that she first began
here been rendered as
Ivory Coast, and Senegal.
tively signalled the closing
using the images thera¬
materially discrete and
The next year she went to
of one path of her life and
peutically to help restore
separable atoms. Unlike
Egypt. Brazil followed in
the opening of another.
her interrupted memory.
Seurat, however, Pindell
19 7 7. She spent seven
In 1979 she quit her posi¬
Her technique for making
seems deliberately to keep
months on a fellowship in
tion as Associate Curator
the collages had the work¬
the line between integra¬
Japan in 1981, and visited
in the Department of
intensive, piecing-together
tion and disintegration
India four times. The
Prints and Illustrated
approach to art that she
blurred. The work at this
stays in the latter country
Books at MoMA and
had long favored: she cut
point in her career—both
(one in which, as it
assumed the position of
the photos into small strips
the collages of punched
happens, the spiritual and
Associate Professor of Art
and glued them onto solid
circles and work consisting
decorative are interactive)
at the State University of
backing material in
entirely of overlapping-
were in part inspired by
New York at Stony Brook
fanlike formations. The
sheets of semi-transparent
the Hindu spiritual prac¬
(where she is now tenured
completed collages incor¬
gridded paper which set up
tice Pindell was engaged
as Full Professor). This
porate several views from
depths of receding
in at that time.
patterns—have a wonder¬
Photographs and post¬
change in work habits
a single country of city,
permitted increased atten¬
and fragment each of these
tion to art making.
views into smaller compo¬
ful elegance and beauty,
cards from these trips,
although their effect of
along with others sent to
lightness is deceptive.
her by friends, became
ries sustained in an auto
of seeing a culture from
Adding bits of printed
the raw material for an
accident resulted in severe
multiple perspectives and
fabrics, string, thread,
extraordinary series of
memory loss. It was
in minute shutter-action
and glitter to her basic
collages which Pindell
during the aftermath of
repetitions.
In the same year, inju¬
nent pieces. The effect was
punched forms, Pindell creates what might be called an adamant deco¬ rativeness, a deliberate challenge to the “mascu¬ line” rigors of quantifica¬ tion and classification that have for centuries domi¬ nated science and art. Around the time she was working on these pieces, Pindell began the extensive travelling that punctuated her career through the 70s and into the 80s. In 1973, under the auspices of the Museum of
Untitled (1970) Detail, showing hand-punched circles and heavy texturing. (Sculpt-metal, paper on board.)
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
11
For the first time
the now-legendary video
ers who had failed her—as
literally travelled out into
Pindell began using
titled, “Free, White, and
well as more general polit¬
the world, exploring its
vibrant color in her work
21,” in which she appeared
ical issues. Although
various material and spir¬
and the results are extraor¬
both as a herself—a Black
Pindell had already
itual features; she turned
dinarily vivid. Although
woman, wrapping a white
addressed political issues in
her back for self-reflection,
she has spoken of these
gauze bandage around her
a variety of ways, this was
and has lately turned out
head as she related inci¬
the first time that she had
again in a different,
ing between more rigorous
dents of racial abuse she
fully engaged painting as
reformist spirit. The scope
esthetic tasks, they in fact
had experienced since
an activist medium.
collages as a means of rest¬
Pindell’s new paintings
of her journey so far has been resolutely global, and
constitute a powerful and
childhood—and, in a
resilient body of work.
blond wig, as the title
dramatically pursue this
In recent examples, she has
figure who accuses her
direction, addressing,
From the little hand-
promises to continue to be.
given them rippling and
of paranoia. The tape is
head on, the afflictions
punched collages of the 70s
convex carapace-like
a general indictment of
of homelessness, war,
to her recent polemics on
surfaces, creating some¬
racism; it was also specif¬
disease with which our age
social issues, few other
thing very close to sculp¬
ically directed at the femi¬
is beset. Her use of collage,
bodies of work combine
tural relief. She has also
nist movement which
of roughly torn and sewn
delicacy and anger as
applied strips of paint
Pindell had come to
cloth, has become excited
successfully as Pindell’s
between the photographic
perceive as racist in its
and angry; material frag¬
does. It is, ultimately, in
fragments to extend an
attitude toward women
mentation assumes distinct
that combination that the
image across a wider
of color.
political implications. The
key to her wholeness-
scale of the work has
in-diversity lies.
expanse. The effect of the
The video was created,
series as a whole is to
collage-like, from images
grown larger, and more
create a sensation of opti¬
spliced together to form
text is incorporated into
cal and temporal move¬
a coherent, progressive
the paintings (an appropri¬
ment—radiating outward
statement. Pindell’s major
ate addition from an artist
from a center in earlier
paintings from the early
who is herself a forceful
pieces, stretching hori¬
80s to the mid-80s were
and careful writer, as this
zontally in more recent
made from a similar join¬
catalogue reveals), as if the
work—that simulates a
ing of parts, now accom¬
images alone were insuf¬
traveller’s perspective:
plished with needle and
ficient to register the
fragmentary, disoriented,
thread. She sewed strips
strength of her protest. Clearly Pindell’s varied
piecemeal, slowly resolving
of canvas together to
into a whole.
form large, amorphous,
journey is continuing
In the 80s Pindell
organic-looking shapes.
apace, and from this mid¬
returned to the painted
These she painted with a
career vantage, the
figure that she had begun
cross-hatching of small
patterns of its progress can
with, but put it to different
parallel paint strokes
be discerned. From a
use in new media. Auto¬
which created something
traditional beginning, she
biography, that search to
like the texture of an all-
moved into the meditative
the center of self, was her
over weave. It was this
realms of chromatic
“fabric” that bound
abstraction; from there she
subject. In 1980 she made
together the disparate images imbedded in the painting. They included in some instances Pindell’s own figure, surrounded by specific references to her family and the details of her own past—incidents of racism, spiritual lead¬
12
HOWARDENA PINDELL
Synthesis and Integration in the Work of Howardena Pindell, 1972-1992 Lowery Stokes Sims Metropolitan Museum of Art Prelude
years, I have been privi¬
augmented by sculptural
decade in a process of self¬
In the 1986 catalogue for
leged to have been an occa¬
hair arrangements or
reclamation and defini¬
the exhibition of of
sional tourist on the Pin¬
permanent alterations of
tion in both her art and
Howardena Pindell’s work
dell odyssey, and the
the body’s surface, such as
her life. She has made a
at the Studio Museum in
commentary offered in
scarifications... as well as
transition in her art from
Harlem, Curator Terri
this essay comes from that
tattooing and skin paint¬
one that seemed to be
Rouse noted: “Like Odys¬
perspective.
seus’s adventurers in
ing or tinting. ... The
generated by prevailing
accumulation and aggre¬
formalist ideologies of the
gation of elements is a
1960s and early 1970s to a more overtly figurative
Homer’s Odyssey, Pindell’s
The Groundwork
work has been an adven¬
In 1984 Howardena
distinctive characteristic
ture, a quest in the skillful
Pindell published an essay,
of African aesthetic....
and polemical art (often
manipulation of multi-
“The Aesthetics of Texture
The components of this
cast under the rubric of
media (oil, acrylic, paper,
in African Adornment,”
assemblage can be re¬
‘ ‘post-modernism”).
handmade paper, found
in the catalogue for an
arranged so that its visual
objects, fabric, fragrance,
exhibition on African
textural drama is altered
powder, postcards, and
body adornment at the
by both light and motion.
the layers of obfuscation
photographic images).”1
African American Insti¬
A direct antecedent of this
with which assimilation
tute in New York.
aesthetic is the surface
and acculturation have
Homeric imagery of
She wrote, “In Africa the
tension that is built up by
disguised her multi-ethnic
wandering is as apt an
geometry and texture of
the aggregated elements.”2
background. 3 While
analogy for Pindell’s actual
the individual human
travel activities as for her
body engages in an ever-
much in this statement
artistic explorations
changing dialogue with
about the work of Howar¬
lenged artists of African-
during the last 20 years.
the adornment selected by
dena Pindell as there is
American descent for at
During the late 1970s and
the wearer. Placing the
about aspects of African
least 150 years, in the case
early 1980s the cycle of her
objects on zones of the
adornment and aesthetic
of Pindell the question has
life revolved around trips
body, the wearer is able to
judgment. There was a
come full-circle.
of substantial duration—
convey messages not only
time when such assertions
some up to six or seven
of beauty or sexual allure,
of connections between an
The Situation
Rouse’s use of the
In retrospect there is as
Concurrently she has gradually peeled away at
questions of identity and antecedence have chal¬
months at a time—to
but also of status, rank,
artist’s ethnicity and their
Pindell is one of several
places that are still exotic
age, tribal identification,
work would not have been
African-American artists
to the rest of us: Japan,
and aesthetics, as well as of
countenanced in tire art
who came to the notice of
India, Africa, and Brazil,
a state of mind or a desire
world. Within the spheres
the art world in the late
just to name a few. Each
to placate or seek protec¬
of anthropology and socio¬
1960s and 1970s, and who
trip, each experience
tion from the environ¬
logy it may still be provoc¬
challenged unilateral desig¬
seemed to bring new input
ment. This intricate inter¬
ative to claim a certain
nations of their work as
to her work, effecting
action between inner
“racial memory” as the
“Black art” and by impli¬
dramatic changes over the
thoughts and outer body
source of one’s decisions—
cation “political art.”
years which were not
reality—hair texture, tone
lest it suggest some kind of
Along with A1 Loving, William T. Williams, Sam
merely about art making,
of skin, proportion,
determinism. But Pindell
but about living life.
height, angularity, and
herself has been actively
Gilliam, Frank Bowling,
flexibility—is further
involved during the last
and Peter Bradley, Pindell
During the last 20
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
13
explored various permuta¬
reminisced about that
placed one on top of the
A skilled practitioner of
tions of the geometric and
trip, so it was with great
other like isolated stills
color-field techniques,
coloristic abstractions that
interest that I walked into
from a film. These
Pindell had used her signa¬
were touted in the art
Howardena’s exhibition
artworks, related to more
ture dots to create nuances
world. Because this coin¬
at the Cyrus Gallery in
recent events in Pindell’s
of space and atmosphere
cided with the Civil Rights
New York City in Octo¬
life (1981), were presented
since the late 1960s. By the
movement and the Femi¬
ber 1989 and saw Ciba-
within a more advanced
mid-1970s, she was
photographic format.
involved in a metaphor¬
nist movement, Pindell in
chrome photographs
particular was challenged
taken in Nigeria in 1973,
by a multitude of stances
enhanced and manipu¬
ment prepared for the
reconstruction in her
that would seek to stake
lated with acrylic and
Cyms Gallery exhibition:
work, often cutting the
their claim on her creativ¬
tempera. The imagery
“I sought solace during
canvas in strips and
ity. Pindell has dealt with
was segmented and drawn
these trips in studying and
sewing them back
those'demands in a way
out, framed as pairs in a
practicing, in some cases,
together, creating registers
that manifests a progres¬
kind of stereoptic vision
universal spiritual tradi¬
on which she would build
sive narrowing of the gap
that elevated these images
tions as a link to under¬
up the surface in elaborate
between herself as the crea¬
of “our” trip from a
standing the culture. I was
stages: painting a sheet of
Pindell wrote in a state¬
ical process of destruction/
tor of her subject matter
simple memento to a
also searching for alterna¬
paper, punching out dots
and herself as the subject
formal critique of percep¬
tive modes of living, think¬
from it, dropping the dots
matter of her art. This can
tion and vision. The work
ing, and seeing.” 4
onto her canvas, finally
It was evident that
squeegeeing- paint through
be observed through vari¬
ofjiri Kollar (‘Foliage”),
ous phases of her career
and Robert Rauschenberg
Pindell had begun to
the “stencil” left in the
and through an examina¬
[Quarter Mile Painting) are
examine her past in order
paper from which she had
tion of the different issues
recalled in the adroit
to clarify it and, at the
punched the dots. The
in the world at large that
formal sense of these
same time, to enrich the
scale of these works—
have interested her at that
photographs of our
perception of the present.
invariably meant to be
particular point.
common experience.
But whereas the experi¬
installed unstretched—was
I first met Howardena Pindell in the spring of
Some were in color, some
ences lived and the media
quite substantial. Occa¬
in black and white; one of
utilized were multiple,
sionally the reconstruction
1973. That summer we
the latter (of the Oba’s
within the totality of
of the paintings took the
visited several African
palace in Lagos) seemed
Pindell’s art there is a
format of interweaving
nations (Kenya, Nigeria,
especially to place that
constant guiding force
strips of canvas in a
Ghana, Ivory Coast, and
experience within a time
that lends an incredible
horizontal-vertical
Senegal), traveling on
which was fast approach¬
continuity and cohesion
relationship, again build¬
to her work.
ing a luscious surface
grants from our respective
ing the hazy realm of
institutions (the Museum of
nostalgia according to the
Modem Art and the
souped-up post-modem
aligned with the Establishing a Style
understructure.
Metropolitan Museum of
time that often loops
In the early 1970s Pindell
Art). The trip lasted two
around in space to retread
had a studio on Seventh
remembers, the principle
months. It was a startling-
one’s youth for the third
Avenue and 28th Street.
referent for her work was
revelation for us both, and
time within a generation.
She was leading a double
the elliptical imagery of
life as a curator and an
Larry Poons. But it was
we both arrived back in
Next to it were photo¬
Up to that time, Pindell
the United States having-
graphs of other trips—to
artist, and with great
clear by the mid-1970s
been jolted to a new plane
Japan, to Egypt.
perseverance and integrity
that she was doing some¬
of awareness about the
Subjected to the same
she managed to keep both
thing quite distinct from
actual relationship we
spatio-temporal manipu¬
persona distinct and out of
optical abstraction.
could have with the
lations by means of the
conflict. Pindell’s work was
Pindell had also been a
Motherland that had
serial juxtapositions of
undergoing a number of
founding member of the
haunted our consciousness
multiple versions of the
changes in this period. She
women’s cooperative
as African-American
same segments in discrete
had begun to rethink her
A.I.R. in the early 1970s,
women. We have often
extensions, these were
approach to painting.
so it was easy to read these
14
HOWARDENA PINDELL
works as Pindell’s manipu¬
Philadelphia Museum of
through a more intense
1970s, she did so as well
lation of the language of
Art. A self-portrait done
accumulation of dots on
with her paper works.
minimalism and formal¬
in the 1960s is imbued
the surface of her work.
The expected two-
ism to a womanist interest.
with the enigmatic quality
Certainly the painstak¬
dimensional quality was
Pindell’s video draw¬
and broad definition of
ings—images taken from
challenged when Pindell
ing process by which she
the encaustic portraits of
the television—are
began to suspend threads
constructed her paintings
Fayum. To complete the
another approach to this
anchored on nails that
invited such a surface read¬
metaphor Pindell has
deconstructivist attitude.
signposted the junctures of
ing; however, as she recalls
rendered her portrait in
The resulting photographs
the grid on the boards. As
that period, Pindell sees a
wax! The Egyptian refer¬
emphasize the graininess
the dots were dropped
structural connection
ence may also be seen in
of the electronically trans¬
onto the board, the seem¬
between her loose-hung,
the frieze-like registers of
mitted image, breaking it
ingly random positioning
strip-constructed canvases
certain of the strip paint¬
down just one level so that
provided an interesting
and African textiles, which
ings of 1971 -74. The
we begin to focus on the
tension in tandem with the
were shown at the Museum
works on paper done at
structure of matter trans¬
taut structure of the grid.
of Modern Art from Octo¬
this time also evince the
mitted as impulse. Also by
They were allowed to
ber 11, 1972 tojanuary 31,
connection, perhaps even
artful choices of image
accumulate along the
1973—-just before our trip
more cogently.
Pindell has at her disposal
length of the nails, and
a particularly accessible
even cling, defying grav¬
to West Africa.5 A group
Pindell’s early hand¬
of resist prints from the
made paper works were
medium for political
ity, to the threads. By
Ivory Coast, included in
eccentrically-shaped semi-
commentary, and she has
comparison, an earlier
the MoMA exhibition,
translucent sheets that
added numbers, direc¬
grid work of 1971 features
feature dotted patterns set
evoked vellum or papyrus,
tional lines, and subtitles to
a large-scale slack grid
in repetitions that were
in which the signature dots
the photographs. She has
constructed from stuffed
slightly askew, similar to
were embedded. She
worked on these intermit¬
and rolled canvas casings.
the seemingly random
would often hang them so
tently since 1973. The
Compared to the works of
positioning of the dots in
that they swung free,
earliest images focused on
1974-77, it is positively
such works as the 1971
instead of encasing them
sporting events, and the
Oldenburgian in its
Untitled acrylic, now in the
in matboard, glass, and
notations took on the char¬
gargantuan ribaldry. All
collection of the Whitney
frame. The spatial dimen¬
acter of play-by-play
these works, however, are
Museum of American Art.
sion of Pindell’s work was
charts conceived of as
united in concept and
replete in these works.
some greater cosmic plan.
spirit by Pindell’s confront¬
Taken in tandem with
Later images from the
She also remembers being particularly
ing anew the challenge
attracted to the beads
other paper works, such as
1980s responded to the
which had preoccupied
shown in the same exhibi¬
the dots laid within the
almost overwhelming-
American artists in New
tion. As a young girl
individual squares of
documentary evidence of
York in the 1940s: trying
Pindell had fabricated
graph paper and
geo-political atrocities—
to reconcile structure and
beaded pins which she sold
numbered randomly, these
torture, famine, apart¬
automatism.
to her classmates in elemen¬
works show the inherent
heid, displacement. On
tary school, and one of the
atomizing which is ulti¬
these and other images of
newer coloristic impulse
highlights of our trip was a
mately the basis of
political duplicity the
seemed to have invaded
session bargaining for
Pindell’s artmaking. She
numbering serves to
Pindell’s works, and some
trade beads on the lawn
once joked that the
remind us of the magni¬
of the dots became bril¬
of the residence of the
numbers on the dots were
tude of suffering in the
liantly colored sequins.
American ambassador
added in response to how
world. Ironic labeling rein¬
I had observed with some
to Ghana.
many dots there were in
forces the pungency of
interest an interplay
These parallels with
her work. For Pindell
Pindell’s observations.
between the work of
African art were a logical
initially the numbers
extension of Pindell’s
provided a visually varie¬
ning to build up the
Pindell at this time.
attraction to Egyptian art,
gated pattern that would
surfaces of her paintings in
Hammons, like Pindell,
which she first saw at the
subsequently be achieved
the second half of the
was using a grid system,
By the later 1970s, a
As Pindell was begin¬
David Hammons and
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
15
or at least a serial system of
textiles through the appli¬
first time. It was even a
to attribute to Andean
folding and patterning in
cation of beadwork, “ ...
means by which artists
weavings.10
his brown paper bag
in which the clustered and
could introduce non-
works and hair pieces.
rippling effect is caused by
European syntax into
Emerging
As these two media occa¬
the beads’ relation to the
art—as seen by Joyce
By 1979 Pindell had left
sionally merged, he too
support fabric, as well as
Kozloffs celebration of
her job at the Museum of
added sequins, and built up
by the building up of
Islamic pattern—but,
Modem Art to teach at the
the surface with collaged
tension into the warp and
as has been noted, Pindell’s
State University of New
elements of hair and wire
woof of the network
approach to art goes
York at Stony Brook.
along the ridges of the
armature of threads....
beyond mere contempla¬
At the time the change was
regularly folded sections of
Figure and ground rela¬
tion of the surface or
welcome, because at last
the brown paper bags.
tionships also scintillate
considerations of pattern.
her art work could become
and may reverse, height¬
It not only engages long-
the central focus of her life.
impulse took on additional
ening the visual surface
suppressed cultural reten¬
Just a few months after
symbolic meaning in the
tension as the sense of
tions, but also addresses
Pindell began her newjob, '
wake of a visit to Brazil in
background and fore¬
perceptual, even psychic,
however, she suffered an
1977 where she again
ground dissolve.”
dimensions of the artist’s
automobile accident
encountered Africa, this
She would later come to
relationship to the
which injured her head
time in the Orisha culture
see the multi-colored dots
environment.
and left her contending
of the Candomble. In 1982
in such paintings as
she exhibited December 31,
conveying the essence of
1980: Brazil: Feast of Iemanja
Pindell's coloristic
One critical evaluation
with memory loss. The so-
of her work which appre¬
called Oval Memory series
her own self as a composite
ciated this distinction was
was a means by which
(1980) in the exhibition
of many cultures and
written by Linda Goode-
Pindell got in touch with
Afro-American Abstraction.6
many backgrounds.
Bryant and Marcy S.
her past. An inveterate
Philips in 1978. Including
collector of postcards,
mered in the white stone¬
The “stuff” of it
Pindell among the “Con-
Pindell had kept boxes of
walled galleries of P.S. 1,
Pindell’s appreciation of,
texturalists”—a group of
cards, some sent by
evoking a coquettish
and predilection towards,
artists involved with imbu¬
friends or her mother,
goddess of the sea, who
manipulating materials
ing abstract and concep¬
some collected during her
along with her Haitian
was, as we have seen,
tual systems with
various travels. Oval Series
counterpart Erzulie and
distinct from color field
content—Goode-Bryant
II: Castle Dragon, 1980-81
die West African synthesis
abstraction. No more was
and Philips observed
(Collection, The Metropol¬
Mami Watta rules the
it at home within the
aspects of “energy, mysti¬
itan Museum of Art) is a
destinies of lovers. The
“pattern and decoration”
cism, automatism, and
collage that features scenes
This painting fairly shim¬
date in the title refers to the
tendency that emerged in
ritual process” in Pindell’s
of historical European
assiduously followed
the art world in the 1970s.
work.8 They also
architecture, but as one
Brazilian New Year’s eve
This revival of decoration
remarked on her inclusion
turns the collage around (it
ritual, in which young-
in the arts was an interval
of additional materials
is meant to be looked at
lovers send out lit candles
between formalist abstrac¬
such as hair in her work,
from all sides) one catches
on paper boats into the
tion of the 1960s and the
which is seen again in the
a glimpse of a Brahma
ocean as a sacrifice to
return to content and figu¬
late 1980s when she incor¬
cow, an octopus, and a
Yemanja.
ration in the 1980s. It has
porated her own blood
lighthouse with palm trees
also been seen as a point in
into Autobiography:
swaying in the proverbial
the catalogue of the exhibi¬
art when “feminist”
Air/CS60.9 The “visual
breeze. The extension of
tion, Kingsley reiterated
interest in handwork and
suspense ... created as
form through the repeti¬
the reading of Pindell’s
patternmaking (as exem¬
color dots blend into textu¬
tion of discretely progres¬
encrusted grids as textile
plified in the work of
ral fields” that they
sive views of a scene or
surfaces. Three years later
Miriam Shapiro and
observed in her work was
objects (a technique to be
Pindell herself would elabo¬
Robert Zakanich) was
an early evocation of an
seen later in the manipu¬
rate on the creation of
accommodated by the
additional influence
lated photographs of our
surface tension in African
“serious” art world for the
Pindell has since come
African trip) first appears
In her introduction to
16
HOWARDENA PINDELL
here, and Pindell continues
floating worlds in some
at once from the vestiges of
‘Japanese memories
to nail and “atomize” or at
pre-Galilean universe, or
Renaissance perspective,
become intermingled...
least facetize the forms,
alternately nebulae of solar
by engaging the incipient
with those from other
creating a prismatic effect
systems. She notes that the
sculptural impulse that had
travels;... the floral
that conveys the illusion of
eccentricity of these
been manifesting itself in
border of a medieval
a third dimension. That
shapes—in which she
her work since the late
manuscript emerges with
dimensional aspect is
finally forgoes the grid—
1970s, and from Western
linear, snow-covered
achieved in later versions
was probably the result of
cosmology, by exploring
cherry trees, and a
of these memory collages
her navigating the asym¬
Japanese and Indian alter¬
European street scene
where—as seen in a group
metrical, maze-like spaces
native views of the world.
dissolves intojapanese
done using Japanese
of Japan.11 Rather than
ready-made commercial
dealing with the fact of
1980s the new spatial
imagery—Pindell shapes
UFOs, Pindell focused on
arenas that grew out of the
another crucial develop¬
the composite scenes into
the shift in our perspective
Oval Memory works and the
ment in Pindell’s work, as
the form of traditional
on our world and the
freely-formed circular and
she made herself explicitly
Japanese armor, either
universe that would be
ovoid forms of unstretched
its subject. In a video, Free,
helmets or shields.
effected by the very fact of
canvas, like those in the
White and 21, shown as part
the existence of vehicles
UFO Show, were further
of the exhibition Dialectics
that could take us out to
tested, and variations on
of Isolation (organized by
images from her past
space. During the same
the spatial strategies were
Ana Mendieta), Pindell
Pindell would eventually
period, Pindell’s contem¬
devised. As seen in the
alternately swathed her
reconstruct her memory;
porary A1 Loving was
Japan Series (from visits in
head in white gauze and
but beyond that it would
working on his version of
1979 and 1981) and the
appeared in white face
became a means by which
post-Hofmannian space in
India Series (visits in 1975,
with a blonde wig, while
Through this painstak¬ ing reconstruction of
^
From the early to mid-
calligraphy.”15 The early 1980s saw
she would break through
painting.12 While
1984, 1986, and 1989)
reciting a litany of racial
the confines of even incipi¬
Pindell’s version came
Pindell was elaborately
abuse visited on her and
ent remnants of western
directly from a more
embellishing the surfaces of
her mother—mental and
galactical concept of
the collages by painting
emotional as well as physi¬
space, Loving was adapt¬
over the photographic
cal assaults. Pindell’s
contributed a work to The
ing Monet’s universe—
images so that, as Ellen
dialogue in the video, in
UFO Show, organized by
the lily-padded pond of
Elsas notes, “. .. glossy
which she is constantly
artist and UFO expert
Giverny—to another
postcards of perfect tourist
confronted by the desire of
Budd Hopkins at the
dimension. In Loving’s
vistas are splintered by
the white establishment to
Queens Museum, that
work the viewpoint of the
hazier continuations of the
deny and denigrate her
perspectival space. In 1982, Pindell
further explored this
artist was focused down¬
same scene painted in
blackness, to demand
process of atomization and
ward into the horizonless
matte tempera.... Mass-
complacency in return for
synthesis, heretofore
space of water, where the
produced photographic
limited access to the estab¬
largely expressed by means
lily pad became the meta¬
images of the Japanese
lishment, seemed to echo
of material and technique.
phor for the space saucer.
landscape are altered to
Mendieta’s comments in
In this work, a series of
Like Barnett Newman,
become a part of a
the introduction to the
oval unstretched canvas
whose “zips” may be seen
personal memory of places
catalogue for Dialectics of
shapes were “adorned” by
as markers from space
or events.”13 Elsas notes an
Isolation: “Do we exist? ...
Pindell’s habitual encrusta¬
down to earth from the
even richer spatial play
To question our culture is
tions of dot forms, but now
horizonless position of
when Pindell combined in
to question our own exis¬
embedded in the surfaces
outer space, Loving
one work, for example,
tence, our human reality.
were momentary breaks
persisted in these works to
several views of Mount
To confront this fact
within which one could see
frame space from the
Fuji “captured from differ¬
means to acquire an
vignettes of places, often
square of the illusionistic
ent locations, times of day,
awareness of ourselves.
overpainted onto post¬
space of painting. By
and seasons of the year. . . .
This in truth becomes a
cards. The individual
utilizing shaped canvases,
A fourth view is an aerial
search, a questioning of
ovals of canvases became
Pindell freed her paintings
one.”14 Furthermore,
who we are and how we
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
17
will realize ourselves.” 16
than those of us who care
sexual preference, orienta¬
cosmos and to reconstruct
Mendieta had assembled
about these issues are will¬
tion, and “decency.” 21
them as a whole onto the
an exhibition of works by
ing to admit, and that
women of African,
redresses in one area do
which was published in the
a very personal meaning.
Native, Asian, and Latino
not necessarily carry over
newsletter Spirit of January,
Like many of us of Afri¬
American heritage, one of
to the other.
is a cogent and exhaustive
can- American descent, she
the first of its kind, signal¬
examination of the stunt¬
is literally reconstructing
ing the first stirrings of
Synthesis
ing of dialogue through
her self into an integral
new political alignments in
During the last decade
censorship in the media,
whole, painstakingly
the art world and the
Pindell’s art making has
particularly in the report¬
reclaiming those bits of
world at large. Even Femi¬
increasingly been accom¬
age on the GulfWar of
information that have
nists were not immune to
panied by her political
1991. 22 This merger of the
been denied, hidden, or
charges of racism; Men¬
activism. In 1979 she was
artistic with the political is
destroyed not only by the
dieta pointed out, “. .. as
one of the main protago¬
perhaps best illustrated by
legacy of slavery that
women in the United
nists in the protest against
the large figural paintings
sought to obliterate our
States politicized them¬
the use of the title Nigger
that form part of the Auto¬
memory—as Pindell’s was
selves and came together in
Drawings by a white artist,
biography Series which
again in the automobile
the Feminist Movement
showing at Artist’s Space.
Pindell has been working
accident—but also by the
with the purpose to end the
While the response of the
on for the last 4 to 5 years.
pathology of individual
Her most recent work,
canvas. For Pindell this has
domination and exploita¬
art world to the protest
In several of these large
families that keep secrets
tion of the white male
was to cry censorship, in
paintings Pindell has sten¬
and deny realities. During
culture, they failed to
the intervening decade
ciled the contour of her
the last few years Pindell
remember us.”17 Then
Pindell has been a prime
body, in her new studio
has grappled with her own
Mendieta lays down the
mover in the redefinition
and residence in upper
historical reality within
gauntlet: “American Femi¬
of the censorship issue to
Manhattan in the late
this pervasive denial.
nism as it stands is basi¬
focus on the defacto exclu¬
1980s. It seemed to me at
cally a white middle class
sion of artists, and ulti¬
the time that the oval-
own view of her artwork,
In reconstructing her
movement. As non-white
mately critics and cura¬
scapes, both in collage and
Pindell is achieving a
women our struggles are
tors, of color in defining
paint, had come up to
synthesis that makes her
two-fold. This exhibition
dialogues about and
engulf Pindell herself, an
whole as a human being,
points not necessarily to
around them in the art
alternative that was almost
so it seems to make perfect
the injustice or incapacity
world. Pindell has
unavoidable, given the
sense to see her emmeshed
of a society that has not
compiled and circulated
imperative that had been
in her work as in Autobiog¬
been willing to include us,
statistics on the percent¬
guiding her work over the
raphy: Water/Ancestors/Middle
last two decades.
Passage/Family Ghosts of
but more towards a
ages of exhibitions of the
personal will to continue
work of women and artists
being ‘other.’ ”18 It is
of color in major
see the varying aspects of
that Pindell would find
indicative of this will to
museums. This informa¬
Pindell’s work as separate
solace as part of the work
find her own way that
tion was later published in
media, separate episodes,
that has served to anchor
There is a tendency to
1988. It would make sense
Pindell, who once saw the
Third Text. 20 She has also
distinct from one another.
her throughout these
women’s movement as the
simply compiled lists of
But it must be viewed as a
years. The erasure of
most viable route for her
artists of color for the
continuum, a fact that is
boundaries is often
into the art world,19 ceased
convenience of an art
reinforced as much by the
thought to be a pathology
to be an active member of
world that still claims not
formal elements of her
to be avoided and recti¬
A.I.R. gallery in 1975
to know who they are.
work as by the conceptual
fied, but with Pindell it
after her second exhibition
In 1990 she wrote a piece
development. In these
seems to be the ultimate
there. She, too, found that
outlining the functions of
large autobiographical
way in which she can come
despite good intentions,
censorship-by-exclusion in
works, we still see Pindell’s
into her own. The process
race and gender issues in
the art world, at a time
impulse to accumulate all
begins with an expiation
this country tend to be
when the censorship issue
the various atomized parts
of a sort: in Autobiography:
more mutually exclusive
was focused solely on
of our existences from the
Air/CS560, also of 1988,
18
HOWARDENA PINDELL
four versions of her supine
adornment she talked
Postscript
grounds, sections of maps
silhouette are literally
about in 1984, and to
Pindell’s art continues to
of the area, and architectu¬
buffeted about by words
which she seems to be
evolve. For a commission
ral details are embedded in
and phrases and questions,
returning in her 1988
completed for the Aviation
an field of paint composed
written into the surface of
painting. As in the adorn¬
Department Percent for
of thousands of individual
the painting, which refer
ment, her painting now
Art Funds in Phoenix,
paintstrokes of white, pale
directly to her “direct
manifests a textual
Arizona, she conceived a
blue, lavender and yellow,
personal experience with
treatment that adds
glass mosaic of various
which approximate the
issues of abuse, some of
“. . . variety, excitement
scenes in and around Phoe¬
atomization of dots. In
which were brought about
and drama to the cultural
nix. These views and
Memory/Arizona (1991) the
by encounters with
codes that they convey
partial views have been
painted field has been elim¬
racism, sexism and issues
from the wearer to the
collaged together in a
inated as the individual
of class.”23 As we glimpse
environment. The body
composition where each
scenes, always set into the
her realistically painted
with its pattern of move¬
bit of information exists
paint off-axis, abut up
face peering out, her body
ment is enhanced and
within its own space,
against one another creat¬
barely distinguished from
given the dimension of a
regardless of what is next
ing unexpected interac¬
the painted daubs and
living canvas on which
to it. Pindell spent a great
tions of forms and space at
collages and painted bits of
each individual constructs
deal of time taking the
their juncture.
visual memory, she seems
his or her own image.”24
photographs herself. She
Recently when I asked
to be quite comfortable
In her most recent paint¬
had followed the same
her if she felt that her work
and at peace.
ings, Pindell seems to find
methodology for Queens/
would become more specif¬
some compatibility
Festival^ 1986-88), the
ically figural, she simply
between her body and its
between herself and her
commission she did for the
shrugged her shoulders and
environment is again
environment, a relation¬
Social Security Building in
departed to return to her
comparable to the African
ship that has for so long
Jamaica, Queens, New
studio, where the work
York, where views of the
would begin anew.
The relationship
eluded her.
various landmarks, resi¬ dents of many ethnic back-
NOTES 1. Howardena Pindell Odyssey. intro, by Terri Rouse. New York; The Studio Museum in Harlem, 1986, p. 5. 2. Beauty By Design: The Aesthetics of African Adornment, edited by MarieTherese Brincard (New York: The African-American Institute, 1984), pp. 36-39. 3. The specifics of the reconstructed interpretations of Pindell’s art in this essay were guided by observations made over a 20-year period, and particularly by a conversation between the author and the artist on January 5, 1992. 4. Howardena Pindell, Artist’s Statement for Howardena Pindell: Autobiography, 1989. 5. See Roy Sieber, African Textiles and Decorative Arts (New York: The Museum of Modem Art, 1972). 6. Afro-American Abstraction: An Exhibi¬ tion of Contemporary Painting and Sculpture of.'Nineteen Black American Artists, curated by April Kingsley at P.S. 1 (Institute
for Art and Urban Resources). Essay by April Kingsley. New York, 1981. 7. Beauty by Design, pp. 37, 38. 8. Linda Goode-Bryant and Marcy S. Philips. Contextures (New York: Just Above Midtown Gallery, Inc., 1978), p. 66. 9. Ibid, p. 67. 10. Ibid, p. 69. 11. Howardena Pindell interview in the catalogue, Since the Harlem Renais¬ sance. Preface byjosephjacobs. (Lewisburg: The Center Gallery, Bucknell University, 1985), p. 34. 12. This refers to artist Hans Hofmann’s description of surface tensions and movement in abstract painting as the “push and pull” of visu¬ ally advancing and receding colors, as well as textures. 13. Ellen Elsas, “Howardena Pindell, Traveler’s Memories:Japan Series,” from the brochure for the exhibition of the Japan Series at the Birmingham Museum of Art January
20-March 17, 1985), and the India Series at the Heath Gallery, Atlanta, Ga. (February 5-March 2, 1985). 14. Ibid 15. Ibid. 16. Dialectics of Isolation: An Exhibition of Third World Women Artists of the United States. Intro, by Ana Mendieta (New York: A.I.R. Gallery, 1980). 17 .Ibid 18. Ibid 19. In her interview in Since the Harlem Renaissance, Pindell says, “I was first told that my work wasn’t black because it wasn’t showing a certain kind of imagery, and then I was put down a bit for being a woman. So the first place I really made an effort to show my work was a black institution, and I was told to go away. That meant I had to show in a white context, and that was a problem because they were basically saying go away as well. The only other approach was the woman’s movement. This was
in the late 60s and early 70s. I was approached by A.I.R., which was just forming, and that was the way I got to first show my work.” p. 36. 20. “Art (World) and Racism, Testimony, Documentation and Statistics,” Third Texts, nos. 3/4 (Spring-Summer, 1988), p. 157. 21. “Art World Racism: A Docu¬ mentation,” New Art Examiner (March 1989), pp. 32-36. and “Breaking the Silence,” New Art Examiner (Parti.• October 1990, pp. 18-23; Partll: November 1990, pp. 23-29, 50-51). 22. “ ‘To Extinguish Once and For All The Possibility of Independent Thought’,” Spirit of January Monthly, serialized over several months begin¬ ning withJanuary-February 1992. 23. See note number 6. 24. Beauty by Design, p. 39.
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
19
Howardena Pindell: Some Reminiscences and a Chronology Reminiscences by Howardena Pindell. Chronology 1943-1986compiled by Loma Simpson. Chronology 1987-1992 compiled by Georgia Coopersmith. Historical notes compiled by Howardena Pindell. Some Reminiscences * When I was eight, I
gallery and art-trade
have been a classical
that much repetition as
publication network we
musician but hated to
each painting is sort of an
have today. I felt there was
practice and had terrible
odyssey or epic. One
stage fright.
unrelated tangent I am
decided to be an artist.
always someone to appre¬
I was sent to the Fleisher
ciate your work. My first
My work was primar¬
following is an interest in
Art Memorial in Philadel¬
exhibit was in our neigh¬
ily about process until in
science. I loved science as
phia for Saturday classes
borhood church which
1979,1 was a passenger in
a child (biology and
in drawing. I felt very
was a black church (the
a freak car accident. After
balancing chemistry
intimidated as I was the
Presbyterian Church was
1979 my work becomes
equations) and I am
youngest person. I do not
segregated at the time).
autobiographical as part
particularly interested in
remember if I was the only
I spent a lot of time in the
of my desperate struggle to
new physics and quantum
person of color.
Philadelphia Museum in
heal myself. I had a brain
mechanics and how it ties
I continued to take Satur¬
Louise and Walter Arens-
injury because of a concus¬
in with spirituality.
day classes in various
berg Collection.
programs in the Philadel¬
sion and not everything
I do not feel a part of
I was very fond of
was working right. . . plus
phia area (Tyler School,
Duchamp’s work. I was
I had severe headaches as a
tion; I guess because I was
Philadelphia College of
also very fond of landscape
result and had a very short
brought up in a different
Art, etc.) until I graduated
painting. There was
fuse as a result of being
time frame. I was born
from high school when I
always a split for me
very uncomfortable. I had
during WWII in 1943.
was sixteen.
between traditional paint¬
trouble walking for a long
I remember the atomic
the present new genera¬
I was determined to be
ing and the avant-garde.
time. Because of the resid¬
bomb and the dark
an artist and was inspired
I was fond of them both.
ual effects of the injury, if
window shades for black¬
by the presence of work by
I was primarily trained in
I drink alcohol my face still
outs and the rationing of
Henry Ossawa Tanner
traditional oil painting
becomes numb, as if I was
food. I remember segrega¬
in the home of one of my
but gave it up (the use of
given novocaine at the
tion and the aggressive
friends who was one of his
oil) after becoming allergic
dentist’s.
relatives. There were
from using too much lead
many Black artists in Phil¬
white. (They never taught
themes are really endless
adelphia plus excellent
about the hazards of lead
and there are so many
movement. I was basically
collections (mostly Euro¬
white until after I gradu¬
things that I want to
brought up on radio not
pean art). There was not
ated. Art hazards are a
explore: I find that I am
TV. I thought TV was
much of a gallery system.
relatively recent concern.)
not at a loss for ideas.
frivolous and can only
More at a loss for time.
really remember Ed Sulli¬
I did not feel it was odd for
I sustain myself
Since autobiographical
oppression as opposed to its more subtle form now. I remember the civil rights
me to be an artist and was
through sheer tenacity as
I do a lot of reading and
van, This is Tour Life, Ernie
frankly quite amazed at
the art world does not
research and now do
Kovaks, You Asked for It and
how closed the art world
want artists of color to be
almost as much writing
the Mouseketeers, Howdy
was once I left Philadel¬
full participants. I work
as I do painting.
phia. Not that Philadel¬
because it is my life’s
phia was open, on the
work. I have no other
itself more with subtle vari¬
ing to do with my life.
contrary, but people were
choice. I do not get bored
ations when I worked with
The difference also is that
working and there was not
with it or impatient unless
process in the late 60s and
there was not the massive
the massive commercial
I am overtired. I could
1970s. Now there is not
advertising or the horren-
20
HOWARDENA PINDELL
My work repeated
Doody, or Flash Gordon. They certainly had noth¬
dous violence that has been
the reason I have also been
A Howardena Pindell Chronology (Contemporary historical events in italics)
so normalized. The
writing as well as paint¬
violence of racism was
ing, teaching, and giving
there but there was a
some public lectures. I do
1943 Born April 14, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
silence around it because
not feel very much part of
1945 Hiroshima andNagasaki.
no one in power wanted to
the art world because of
1948-60 Takes art classes at Philadelphia Art College
acknowledge it.
the restrictive environ¬
and Fleisher Art Memorial, and Tyler School of Art.
Travel has made the
ment that is brought to it
big difference for me in
by people who are patho¬
1950-53 Korean War. 1955 56 Bus boycott, Montgomery; segregation banned by ICC
that I did not get isolated
logically indifferent. I do
on interstate travel; Emmett Till murdered.
in the American pathol¬
not see art and life as
1956 58 Bus boycott, Tallahassee.
ogy. I lived in Sweden, and
separate.
1960
-
Pickets Woolworth’s, Philadelphia. Boycotts and sit-
ins; Civil Rights Act; independence for Chad, Congo Brazzaville,
Japan, and India, and spent a fair amount of
-
Howardena Pindell, 1991
Dahomey, Gabon, Ivory Coast, Mali, Nigeria, Somali, Upper Volta, Zaire.
time in varying degrees in parts of Europe (England,
1961 Attends Boston University, studies painting. Free¬
France, Denmark,
dom Rides;first prime minister of Democratic Republic of Congo
Norway, Italy), Brazil,
(Zaire) assassinated; invasion of Cuba (Bay of Pigs). 1963 Spends summer working and travelling in
Mexico, Egypt, Kenya,
* These reminiscences are
Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory
adapted from an article
Mexico. Attends Spanish language classes in Saltillo.
originally published in
March on Washington; Medgar Evers killed; President John F.
Coast, Senegal, the Carib¬ bean, parts of the United States and Canada, and
M/EfA/N/I/N/G, Issue #10 (Winter 1991)
Kennedy assassinated. 1964
Visits Sweden, Denmark, France.
USSR. I have always been
1965 Graduates from Boston University as a figurative
concerned about the world
painter. Voting Rights Act; Malcolm Xassassinated; Watts; Viet¬
at large and spent some of
nam War 1965-73.
my summers during my
1965 Attends Yale University. Learns more about color
years as a teenager in an
and form. Continues figurative work.
international kibbutz like
1967 Receives MFA from Yale University. Hired by
environment in the hills of
Museum of Modern Art, New York, as an Exhibition
Pennsylvania. The ideal
Assistant. Meets Lucy Lippard and is exposed to New
for me was international
York feminist art circle.
cooperation as each
1968 Meets John Dowell and Benny Andrews and is
culture has so much rich¬
inspired by their commitment and drive. Rev. Martin
ness to offer. I also worked
Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy assassinated.
in a factory for one
1969 Is promoted to Curatorial Assistant, Department
summer and got a taste of
of Drawings and Prints, Museum of Modern Art, New
what could happen if one
York. Begins series of stain drawings characterized by
gave up one’s education.
short, staccato brush strokes. My Lai massacre.
I am from a very racially
1970 Creates dark, eight-by-eight-foot stain paintings
mixed family (some are
with multi-colored dot configurations. Egypt’s president
liberal and some very
Gamal Abdul Nasser assassinated; National Guard kills student
conservative) and have
protesters at Kent State.
tried to understand or
1971 Founds A.I.R. Gallery, New York City with
appreciate this. I have
Susan Williams, Barbara Zucker, Dottie Attie, Maude
been puzzled by the need
Boltz, Nancy Grigoriadis, and Nancy Spero. Investi¬
for one culture to be
gates soft sculpture and creates monochromatic wall/
obsessed with domination
floor pieces. New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller rejects Attica
of another. The goal of my work is to share knowledge. This is
Correctional Facility inmates’ demandsfor prison refom and rfuses to negotiate; 28prisoners and 9 hostages die as a result of an assault by 1000 enforcementpersonnel. Two-week strike of Museum of
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
21
Modem Art employees (PASTA/MoMA).
1982 Returns to the USA. Works now incorporate
1972 Marks and numbers hole-punched dots of paper
picturesque postcards from travels and friends. Ameri¬
and assembles them on sewn graph paper and board,
can, European, and Japanese images are sliced into strips
continuing to favor monochromatic hues.
and spread out in a fan-like construction on museum
1973 Participates in Museum of Modern Art Library
board with the image meticulously painted in the spaces
Overseas Program and tours Kenya, Ghana, Nigeria,
between. Their three-dimensional wave and conical
Ivory Coast, and Senegal with Lowery Sims of the
shapes resemble helmets and mountains. A collaborative
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Investigates
work with Feon Golub is published in Black Current maga¬
print workshops, museums, artists studios, libraries,
zine. Israel invades Lebanon.
galleries, and art schools. Watergate; seven-week strike of
1983 Receives a National Endowment for the Arts
MoMA/PASTA employees.
Painting Fellowship. Travels to India. Works become
1974 Visits Egypt. Develops supportive relationship
anthropomorphic and more free in composition. Stops
with Mel Edwards, Benny Andrews, and Sam Gilliam
working with sewn canvas. Writes essay, “An American
upon return to USA. Photographs TV with acetate ink
Black Woman in ajapanese Garden,” for Heresies.
drawings over screen. Introduces color on hand punched
US invades Grenada.
dots. Karen Silkwoodmurdered.
1984 Becomes a full professor at State University of
1975 Receives French Government Artist Grant to live
New York at Stony Brook. Returns to India, where she
and work in Cite des Arts, Paris. Travels to India. Meets
takes photographs and collects postcards.
Richard Hunt, a Chicago sculptor. Creates small, over¬
1985 Begins to work again with sewn canvases. Post¬
lapping postcard collages which reveal underlying
card works include several table-top arrangements which
images through holes cut in upper layers.
resemble landscapes.
1976 In charge of renovation of the Department
1986 Postcard works, now mounted on canvas, become
of Prints and Illustrated Books, Museum of Modern Art,
more painterly and less restricted to photographic
New York. Collaborates withjudith Solodkin on litho¬
imagery. Iran-Contra hearings; Mozambique’s president Machel
graphs and etchings at Solo Press, New York.
killed in plane crash; US bombs Libya.
1977 Is named Associate Curator, Department of Prints and Illustrated Books, Museum of Modern Art,
1987 Receives Guggenheim Fellowship in Painting. 1988 Begins cutting up own photographs. Travels to
New York. Visits Brazil.
USSR as delegate to Afro-American Cultural Sympo¬
1978 Begins to use cut and sewn canvas. 1979 Joins with other artists and writers to protest
sium, Moscow. Curates and organizes travelling exhibit
against the “Nigger Drawings” exhibition shown at
Color)”, Intar Gallery, New York. Intfada begins.
“Autobiography: In Her Own Image (Women Artists of
Artists’ Space in New York. Travels tojapan for the
1989 During the summer travels to England and France
Museum of Modern Art. Decides to leave Museum of
to do visual research on Roman mosaics at the British
Modern Art. Is appointed Associate Professor by State
Museum and at the Fouvre, and to see the exhibit Magi¬
University, New York at Stony Brook, in Long Island.
cians of the Earth, at the Centre du Georges Pompidou.
Is involved as a passenger in an auto accident that results
US invades Panama; Congressman George Thomas ‘Mickey”
in partial memory loss. Uses postcards and their inscrip¬
Leland killed in a plane crash in Gampale, Ethiopia.
tions to recall friends and past experiences. Work is
1990 Receives the College Art Association Artist Award
charged with explosive colors. Creates “Sorry, It Was
for a Distinguished Body of Work. Nelson Mandela released.
An Accident,” continuing to use hand-punched and
1991 Artist’s mother dies after prolonged illness. Installa¬
painted paper with glitter on canvas.
tion of mosaic wall in Sky Harbor International Air¬
1980 Creates “Free, White and Twenty-One” video
port, Phoenix, Arizona, commissioned by Phoenix Arts
tape in response to the hypocritical politics of the feminist
Commission. US and allies bomb and invade Iraq. Democrati¬
movement toward Black women. Continues to create
cally elected President Aristide of Haiti ousted by coup.
sewn canvas pieces.
1992 Po lice acquitted in brutal beating of Rodney King. Uprisings
1981 Receives U. S./Japan Friendship Commission
in response tv verdict in Los Angeles and other US cities.
Creative Artists Fellowship. While injapan paints academic watercolor still lifes and takes over 3000 photo¬ graphs. Receives tenure at State University of New York at Stony Brook, in Fong Island.
22
HOWARDENA PINDELL
Resources include Juan Williams, Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil Rights Years 1954-65 (New York: Penguin Books, 1987) and Bernard Gunn, The Timetables ojHistory (New York: Simon & Shuster, 1991).
HOWARDENA PINDELL
Paintings and Drawings
Howardena Pindell: A Checklist of Works in the Exhibition
1. Kensington Series #2, 1974
10. Video Drawing: Hockey Series, 1973-75
Wax, black crayon on museum board, 15 x 11"
Cobrphotograph, 8 x 10"
Lent by the artist
Lent by the artist
2. Parabia #2, 1974
11. Video Drawings: Baseball Series # 1 and #2, 1973-75
Wax, black crayon on museum board, 91 fax 63/4"
Colorphotogaphs, 5x7" each
Lent by the artist
Lent by the artist
3. Parabia Text #5, 1974
12. Free, White & 21, 1980
Pen, ink, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread, powder on board,
Video tape, 12 minutes
91/2x61/2"
Courtesy of the Kitchen, New York City
Lent by the artist. 13. Autobiography: Memory: Past, 1980-81 4. Untitled #5, 1974
Acrylic, tempera, 78 x 122"
Pen, ink, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread, powder on board,
Lent by the artist
8x10" Lent by the artist.
14. Autobiography: Japan (Kokuzo Bosatsu), 1982 Postcards, acrylic,gouache, tempera, 111/2 x 15"
5. Untitled #43, 1974
Courtesy of the Heath Gallery, Atlanta
Watercolor,gouache, crayon, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread
7% x 91/2" Collection Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pindell, Philadelphia on board,
6. Untided #73, 1975
15. Autobiography: Hiroshima Disguised (in 10 parts), 1982 Acrylic, paper, dye, gouache on sewn canvas, 60 x 132" Lent by the artist
Watercolor, gouache, crayon, ink, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread on board, 71/2x91/2"
16. Autobiography: Japan (Hase Kannon), 1982
Collection Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pindell, Philadelphia
Acrylic, tempera, gouache, postcards on museum board,
7. Untitled #5, 1975
Courtesy of June Kelly Gallery, New York
18x19x5"
Pen, ink, punched papers on graph paper, 34 x 46"
Lent by the artist
17. Autobiography: Japan (Mountain Reflection), 198283
8. Video Drawing: Football Series, 1973-75
Acrylic,paper, dye,gouache, 108 x 108"
Color photograph, 8 x 10"
Lent by the artist
Lent by the artist 18. Autobiography: Japan (Shisen-do, Kyoto), 1982 9. Video Drawing: Swimming Series, 1973-75
Acrylic, tempera, dye, paper, polymer photo transfer on sewn canvas,
Color photograph, 8 x 10"
69x69"
Lent by the artist
Lent by the artist 19. Autobiography: Japan (Bridge I, Miajima), 1982 Tempera, postcards, gouache, 20 x 22"
Collection Bellevue Hospital, New York
24
HOWARDENA PINDELL
20. Autobiography: East/ West: Waterfall, 1983
30. Autobiography: Undersea Tolland: Earth, 1987
Acrylic, postcards, tempera, gouache, watercohr on museum board,
Acrylic, gouache, tempera, oil stick, polymer photo transfer on sewn
27x32x6"
canvas, 70 x 105"
Lent by the artist
Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
21. Autobiography: India (Temple), 1984
31. Autobiography: Egypt (Colossi of Memnon, 1964
Acrylic, gouache, tempera, postcards, watercohr on museum board,
and Paris, 1971), 1988
32x20x3"
Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 9x35x2"
Lent by George N’Namdi, Detroit.
Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
22. Autobiography: India (Lotus Pond), 1984
32. Autobiography: Bedford Stuyvesant (Brooklyn,
Acrylic, gouache, tempera, postcards, watercohr on museum board,
N.Y., 1968), 1988
22i/2x28i/2"
Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 9 x 20"
Lent by the artist
Lent by William and Gloria Johnson, The Woodlands, Texas
23.1.D. Apartheid, 1985 (Installation Piece) Vinyl type, chair, photostat, tape,
8x8x8'
Lent by the artist
33. Autobiography: Japan (Kanazawa, 1981), 1988 Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 36/2x81/2x2"
24. Autobiography: Africa (Red Frog II), 1986
Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
Acrylic, polymer photo transfer, oilstickon canvas, 78 x 70" Lent by the artist
34. Autobiography: Water/Ancestors/Middle Passage/
25. Autobiography: African Buddha, 1986
Acrylic, tempera, cattle markers, oil stick, paper, polymer photo trans¬
Acrylic, paper, polymer photo transfer on sewn canvas, 51 x 91"
fer, vinyl type on sewn canvas, 118 x 71"
Family Ghosts, 1988
Lent by William and Gloria Johnson, The Woodlands,
Lent by the Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connec¬
Texas
ticut; Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection
26. Separate But Equal: Apartheid, 1987
(Photoreproduction.)
Acrylic, vinyl type, faux rhinestones, nails, wood, caulking, zircon, 24x211/2"
35. Autobiography: Air/CS560, 1988
Lent by the artist
Acrylic, tempera, oil stick, bhod (the artist’s), paper, polymer photo
27. Autobiography: Fire: Suttee, 1986-87
Lent by the artist
transfer, vinyl type on canvas, 87 x 84" Acrylic, paper, polymer photo transfer on canvas, 90 x 56" Courtesy of Peter Huber, Norfolk
36. Video Drawing: War Series: Napalm: Ethiopia,
(Photoreproduction.)
1988
28. Rambo Real Estate, 1987
Lent by the artist
Cohrphotograph, image 6/4x91/2" Acrylic, newspaper, vinyl type, tempera on paper, 45 x 42" Lent by the artist
37. Video Drawing: War Series: Torture: El Salvador,
29. Autobiography: Earth/Eyes/Injuries, 1987
Cohr photograph, image
Acrylic, paper, polymer photo transfer, oil stick on sewn canvas,
Lent by the artist
1988 6/4
x 91/2"
88x
78" Lent by William and Gloria Johnson, The Woodlands,
38. Video Drawing: War Series: Birth Defects: Agent
Texas
Orange: Vietnam # 1, 1988 Cohr photograph, image 6/4x91/2" Lent by the artist
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
25
39. Video Drawing: War Series: Birth Defects: Agent
49. Art Crow/ Jim Crow, 1988
Orange: Vietnam #2, 1988
Photo etching letterpress (Trial-proof bookwork, edition of 10),
Color photograph, image 6% x 9$ ” Lent by the artist
7f4x7f4" Lent by the artist
40. Video Drawing: War Series: Birth Defects: Agent
50. Autobiography: The Search: Chrysalis/ Meditation:
Orange: Vietnam #3, 1988
Positive/ Negative, 1988-89
Colorphotograph, image
Acrylic, tempera, oil stick, cattle markers, paper, polymer photo
6/4
x 91/>"
Lent by the artist
transfer on canvas, 72 x 112"
41. Video Drawing: War Series: Starvation: Sudan # 1
Texas
Lent by William and Gloria Johnson, The Woodlands, (Makluk: 14 years old), 1988 Color photograph, image 61/4 x 9 t/f"
51. Autobiography: Switzerland (Road to Lucerne,
Lent by the artist
1971), 1989
42. Video Drawing: War Series: South Africa # 1, 1988
Lent by the artist
Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 81/2x34" Color photograph, image 61/4 x 9 52. Autobiography: Egypt (Thebes, 1974), 1989
Lent by the artist
Photograph, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 18 x 81/2" 43. Video Drawing: War Series: South Africa #2, 1988
Lent by Dr. Dexter Fields and Dr. Margaret Betts,
Color photograph, image
Detroit
61/4x91/2"
Lent by the artist 53. Autobiography: Egypt (Cairo and Thebes, 1974), 44. Video Drawing: War Series: “A Thousand Points of
1989
Light”: White Phosphorus: El Salvador, 1988
Photograph, acrylic, tempera on museum board,
Color photograph, image
Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
61/4
x
91/2"
8
x 33 x 2"
Lent by the artist 54. Autobiography: Egypt (Cairo Residential, 1974), 45. Video Drawing: War Series: “L” Word #1, 1988
1989
Color photograph, image
Photograph on museum board, acrylic, tempera, 81/2x18x2"
6/4
x 9 ft"
Lent by the artist
Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
46. Video Drawing: War Series: The “L” Word #2,
55. Autobiography: Japan (Kyoto: Yasaka Shrine
1988
Entrance and Dry Garden, Ginkakuji, 1981), 1989
Color photograph, image
6/4
x 9 1/2"
Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 36 x 9"
Lent by the artist
Lent by Dr. Hills Howard, Detroit
47. Video Drawing: War Series: Cambodia, 1988
56. Autobiography: Japan (Hirosaki: Nebuta Festival
Color photograph, image 61/4 x 9 t/a"
and Kyoto: Gion Festival, 1981), 1989
Lent by the artist
Cibachrome, acrylic, tempera on museum board, 91/2 x 33 x 2" Courtesy of the N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit
48. Video Drawing: War Series: New World Order: Retreat, 1991 Color photograph, image
57. Phoenix: Road to Casa Grande (1989), 1990 6^4
x9
Lent by the artist
26
HOWARDENA FIND ELL
Cibachrome, gouache on museum board, 81/2 x 37" Courtesy of the Heath Gallery, Atlanta
58. Memory: Arizona, 1991
61. Who Do You Think You Are? One of Us!, 1991-92
Venetian glass mosaic wall mural, 10 x 14'
Acrylic, tempera, polymer photo transfer, oil stick, vinyl type, paper on
Collection of the city of Phoenix, Arizona (Sky Harbor
sewn canvas, 71
International Airport). Commissioned through the
Lent by the artist
" diameter
Phoenix Arts Commission. Fabricator: Crovatto Mosa¬ ics, Spilimbergo (Friuli-Venezia).
62. Separate but Equal: Genocide: AIDS, 1990-92
(Photoreproduction.)
Acrylic, oil stick, vinyl type, 48 x 72" each Lent by the artist
59. Autobiography: Scapegoat, 1990 Acrylic, tempera, oil stick, polymer photo transfer on canvas,
63. Columbus, 1991-92
72 x 141"
Acrylic, tempera, polymer photo transfer, oil stick, vinyl type on sewn
Lent by the artist
canvas, 88 x 97" Lent by the artist
60. “Till Birnam Wood Remove to Dunsinane” (.Macbeth: Act 5, Scene 3), 1991 Acrylic, tempera, polymer photo transfer, oil stick, vinyl type on sewn canvas, 89" diameter Lent by the artist
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
27
Work from the early 1970s The recent drawings in color have developed from the monochromatic work which I executed in 197 3. The previous work involved points of paper, dots which I numbered in black ink and clustered at random or ordered by means of tweezers and spray adhesive. The color drawings have developed in somewhat the same way, although they repre¬ sent a drawing made up of many drawings in acrylic, gouache, watercolor, and oil pastel, which have been folded and destroyed by means of a hole punch (Vs" or '/4"). The color points are then gathered together with the color dots which remain from other destroyed drawings and are used to create a new work. Howardma Pindell, 1976
Parabia #2, 1974 Wax, black crayon on museum board, 9 J/2X
63/4n
Lent by the artist
28
HOWARDENA PINDELL
4
Untitled #5,1974 Pen, ink, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread, powder on board, 8 x 10" Lent by the artist.
5
Untitled #43,1974 Watercolor, gouache, crayon, punched papers, spray adhesive, thread on board, 77/s x 9^2" Collection Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pindell, Philadelphia
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
29
Untitled #5,1975 Pen, ink, punched papers on graph paper, 34 x 46" Lent by the artist Full image below; detail on page 31.
30
HOWARDENA PINDELL
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