Thursday, July 16, 2015

African American Art – an Entity of History

In the conventional world, where we are bound to our work and deadlines there exists an unconventional world of art, Aristotle stated “The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.” Art plays a vital change in the psychology of any individual; it opens up the right hemisphere of the brain which is mainly for the creativity and abstract things and it is as important as the side which beholds the analytical part.

One of the well-known forms of art is African American Art and it has been getting popular with every passing day. African American art is based on the different human emotions and captures the various notions related with society, life and the conventional world.

Provenance

African Americans were captive during the civil war in America and were compelled to create artifacts for living, various objects like iron pieces, ceramics, duvets and silver were prepared on the daily basis. A lot of Slave owners offered African Americans to sell the crafts and keep all the profits for the ones they made in their free time.
Some of the more “human” families provided private tutoring to their slaves and encouraged them to Opt art professionally, it lead to the rise in the African American Art and bestowed the early artists like Robert M. Douglas Jr. and Joshua Johnson.

When the civil war ended the slavery was abolished completely which provided opportunity for the black art to be displayed in the art museums. However, the art did not gain much popularity in the United States for a long period but was noticed instantly in the European countries and was displayed in most of the art museum in Europe.


Significance

African American art is the most practical and significant form of art because of the strife that was involved in the birth of this form and the topics that it covers which consists a lot of emotions.
This uniqueness of black art has lead its popularity to a global scale and the fans of this form of art are growing in numbers every day. Many of the modern artists like William Tolliver, Kadir Nelson, and Frank Morrison are experimenting with the ancestral styles of painting and merging it with the modern techniques and ideas to give a new shape to the growing African American Art.

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