African American Artist Fisk University 1970 Vincent Smith David Driskell Art

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Seller: memorabilia111 ✉️ (808) 100%, Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan, US, Ships to: US & many other countries, Item: 176270372958 AFRICAN AMERICAN ARTIST FISK UNIVERSITY 1970 VINCENT SMITH DAVID DRISKELL ART. PAINTINGS BY VINCENT SMITH DECEMBER 6-31, 1970 THE ART GALLERY BALLENTINE HALL FISK UNIVERSITY NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE EXHIBITION INFORMATION WITH PRINTED LETTER BY DAVID DRISKELL AND BRIEF BIOGRAPHY IN BACK. FOLDED 8X10 INCHES IN OVERRALL GOOD SHAPE

Smith, Vincent DaCosta. (Brooklyn, NY, 1929-New York, NY, 2004)   Bibliography and Exhibitions MONOGRAPHS AND SOLO EXHIBITIONS: Atlanta (GA). Emory University. VINCENT SMITH. 1973. Solo exhibition. BARAKA, AMIRI. In the Tradition: for Black Arthur Blythe. N.p.: 1980. Unpag. (10 pp.). Cover art by Vincent D. Smith. 8vo (21 cm.), stapled pictorial wraps. First ed. BARAKA, AMIRI. VINCENT SMITH - The Original Hipster as Artist. 1981. In: The Black Nation Journal of African American Thought Vol. 4, no. 1 (January/February 1981):16-18, 22 (illus.) Green illustrated wraps. Baraka, Amiri, Aminia Baraka, and VINCENT D. SMITH (illus.). The Music: Reflections on Jazz and Blues. New York: William Morrow, 1987. 332 pp., illus. Poems and essays. 8vo (25 cm.), gray cloth spine, lettered in silver, over gray papered boards, pictorial d.j. First ed. Birmingham (MI). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. VINCENT D. SMITH: Retrospective (1965-1991). 1991. Solo exhibition. Birmingham (MI). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. VINCENT D. SMITH: Scrapple from the Apple. November 5-December 31, 1994. Solo exhibition. [Advertised as "Vincent D. Smith. Works on Paper and Monoprints" ARTnews 93 (November 1994):73.] Brooklyn (NY). Brooklyn Museum of Art. VINCENT SMITH: Oils, Drawings, Prints. 1977. Solo exhibition. Brooklyn (NY). Brooklyn Museum School Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1955. Solo exhibition. Brooklyn (NY). Center for Art and Culture of Bedford Stuyvesant. VINCENT SMITH: Works on Paper 1964-1983. 1981. Solo exhibition. Brooklyn (NY). Macon Street Library. VINCENT SMITH. 1956. Solo exhibition. CHICAGO (IL). David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago. African Affinities/Expressionist Essences: VINCENT SMITH's Eight Etchings, 1965-1966. February 7-28, 1997. Solo exhibition of work created at the height of the Civil Rights movement. Chicago (IL). G.R. N’Namdi Gallery. VINCENT D. SMITH: A Twenty Year Survey, Works from the 70s and 80s. 1998. Solo exhibition. Chicago (IL). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Body and Soul, The Jazz Series Monotypes. January 1-February 1, 2005. Solo exhibition. Announcement card, printed on both sides, 1 color illus. Dolch, Margaret P. and VINCENT D. SMITH (illus.). Stories from Africa. Champaign (IL): Garrard Publishing Co., 1975. vii, 168 pp., 16 stories with 16 full color illus. 8vo (22 cm.), cloth, pictorial d.j. First ed. Erie (PA). Erie Art Museum. VINCENT D. SMITH: Paintings and Drawings. 1975. Solo exhibition. Fitzgerald, Sharon. VINCENT SMITH: Artist Smith's Portrait of the late financial wizard Reginald Lewis becomes first African American mounted within Harvard Law's distinguished-achievers. 1999. In: American Visions (June 1999). Extensive quotes from interview with Vincent Smith. Fitzgerald, Sharon. VINCENT SMITH: sage, bohemian, prince. 1999. In: American Visions, Vol. 14, no. 3 (June/July 1999):22-7. 4to, wraps. Gloster, Dorothy. A Foremost Afro-American Artist Discusses his Work [Interview with VINCENT D. SMITH]. 1972. In: African Progress Magazine, New York (March/April 1972), 32-34 (illus.) 4to, wraps. Green, Nancy E. Dreams, Myths, and Realities: The Work of VINCENT SMITH. 2001. In: NKA: Journal of contemporary African art 15 (Fall/Winter 2001):58-63, illus. 4to, wraps. Gwinne, James B., ed. and VINCENT D. SMITH (illus.). AMIRI BARAKA: The Kaleidoscopic Torch. New York: Stepping Stones Press, 1985. 189 pp., illus. A literary tribute to Baraka, through poems and essays by a myriad authors and artists including Vincent D. Smith's color cover illus. 8vo, pictorial wraps. Ithaca (NY). Herbert F. Johnson Art Museum, Cornell University. Dreams, Myths and Realities: A VINCENT SMITH Retrospective. January 27-March 18, 2001. 48 pp. exhib. cat., 22 color plates. Text by Nancy Green; fascinating interview with the artist. Prominent New York painter during the decades after WWII both as an artist, as a teacher in the Black Arts movement, and as an occasional curator of exhibitions of work by African American artists. Large square 4to (28 cm.), pictorial wraps. First ed. Jamaica (NY). Store Front Museum/Paul Robeson Theatre. VINCENT D. SMITH. October 27-December 28, 1981. Solo exhibition of gouaches, collages, and monoprints. Poster announcement. Lancaster (PA). Franklin & Marshall College. VINCENT SMITH. 1978. Solo exhibition. Mahwah (NJ). Ramapo College Art Galleries. VINCENT SMITH: An Overview, Combinations, Permutation and Transformation. 1988. 28 pp. exhib. cat., photo of artist, illus., chronol. Foreword by Jacob Lawrence; texts by David Driskell and Horace Brockington. 8vo (22 cm.), wraps. First ed. Nairobi (Kenya). Paa Ya Paa Arts Centre. VINCENT SMITH: The Black Image. 1973. Solo exhibition of 30 prints. [Traveled to: Chemchemi Creative Arts Center, Aruhsa, Tanzania; Kibo Art Gallery, Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.] Nashville (TN). Fisk University Art Gallery. Paintings by VINCENT SMITH. December 6-31, 1970. Unpag. (4 pp.), exhib. cat., 1 b&w illus. (Wailing for the Funk Dealer[s]. 1969, oil, collage & sand on masonite. 28 x 31 in.), b&w cover photo of artist, checklist of 25 works (15 paintings in oil on canvas or masonite; 2 watercolors, 8 charcoal drawings), brief biog. Intro letter by David Driskell who was at Fisk at the time and who presumably curated the exhibition. 8vo (26 cm.), folded wraps. First ed. New Orleans (LA). Dillard University Art Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Painting and Drawings. 1999. Exhib. cat., illus. Wraps. New Orleans (LA). Stella Jones Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1999. Solo exhibition. New Rochelle (NY). Spectrum IV Graphics Gallery. VINCENT D. SMITH: Journey to the Source Series. Paintings. Pastels. Prints. March 21-April 10, 1982. Exhib. cat., illus., photo of artist, chronol., exhibs. New York (NY). Alexandre Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Early Work. January 4-29, 2005. Solo exhibition of Vincent Smith’s early paintings and works on paper from the 1950s and 1960s, including pieces from the Saturday Night in Harlem series created during the mid-1950s, his drawing "The Murder of Fred Hampton." New York (NY). Alexandre Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Selected Paintings. February 2-March 3, 2012. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Alexandre Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Selected Works 1952-1972. September 4-October 11, 2003. Solo exhibition of woodcuts, paintings, painted collages. Exhibition announcement, 4 color plates. Text by David C. Driskell. Tri-fold card is printed on glossy stiff card stock. Smith's last show. [Review: Edward Leffingwell, "Vincent Smith at Alexandre," Art in America (April 2004). Describes several of the works in detail. Holland Cotter, "Vincent Smith,"NYT, September 26, 2003.] Text of Driskell's essay is available through Alexandre Gallery website: http://www.alexandregallery.com/artists/viewPress/78. Folding card. 7 x 7 in., unfolding to 7 x 21 in. New York (NY). Cooper Square Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1979. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. VINCENT D. SMITH: A Print Retrospective. May 7-27, 1994. Solo exhibition. Announcement card, illus. New York (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. VINCENT D. SMITH: High-Priests, An Ostrich, and A Juju-Man. 1997. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. VINCENT D. SMITH: Paintings, 1953-1989. March 10-April 7, 1990. Exhib. announcement card, illus. Solo exhibition of paintings. [Review: Michael Brenson, "Review/Art," NYT (March 30, 1990):C 28.] Card. New York (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. VINCENT D. SMITH: Prints and Multiples. November-December, 1994. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. VINCENT SMITH: Print Retrospective. 1995. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. Oils and Drawings by VINCENT SMITH. 1967. Exhib. cat., illus. Smith's first solo exhibition at Larcada. New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1970. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1968. Solo exhibition. [Lynn H. Schafran, "Reviews and Previews: Vincent Smith," Art News 67 (Sept. 1968):14+. New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: African Series #1. 1975. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: African Series #2 Oils and Drawings. Also illustrations for Folklore Stories from Africa. January 4-28, 1977. Exhibition brochure. Text by David Driskell "An Old Look, New Vision." New York (NY). Larcada Gallery. VINCENT SMITH: Recent Paintings. April 3-28, 1973. Gallery exhibition brochure, 3 color plates of oil and sand paintings, biog. Texts by Imamu Amiri Baraka, Jacob Lawrence. [Review: John Canaday, "Art: Vincent Smith's Expressive Style," NYT (April 21, 1973):23. "A Black artist whose Blackness is the spiritual wellspring of his art is not a good artist simply for that reason. Like any other kind of artist, he has to be able to say whatever he has to say in terms that demand no concession. Vincent Smith is such a painter, and his exhibition has the further effect of suggesting that there may be, at last, such a thing as a Black idiom, a school of Black painting, whose members share points of view and a technical vocabulary that identify them with one another without holding an individual to a group formula."] Stapled wraps. New York (NY). Louis Abrons Arts Center, Henry Street Settlement. VINCENT D. SMITH: Riding on a Blue Note. Monoprints and Works on Paper on Jazz Themes. January 19-February 28, 1990. Unpag. (24 pp.) exhib. cat., 14 illus. (including 8 full page color plates), chronol., exhibs., awards, colls., bibliog., exhib. checklist of 44 works from 1968-1989. Intro. Susan Fleminger; text by Sharon F. Patton; poems by Steve Cannon and Amiri Baraka. [Traveled to six other locations: Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI; NCCU Art Museum, Durham, NC; Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, January 23-March 10, 1991; Hammonds House, Atlanta, GA; Anderson Gallery, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA; Picker Art Gallery, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY, September 1-November 3, 1991.] Oblong 4to [21 x 25 cm.], stapled pictorial wraps. First ed. New York (NY). NYC Transit, 116th St. Station. VINCENT SMITH: Minton's Playhouse/Movers and Shakers (1999). 1999. Glass mosaic. 116th St. station, IRT Lenox Line, New York City Transit. Features cultural figures from Harlem, including Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, Sarah Vaughn and Dinah Washington. New York (NY). Oberia D. Dewey Multi-Service Center. VINCENT D. SMITH: Jonkonnu Festival wid the Frizzly Rooster Band [Mural]. c.1989-90. A three-part mural permanently installed at Oberia D. Dewey Multi-Service Center, 127 W. 127th St. 5 x 57 feet, oil on canvas. NYC Percent-for-Art project. (See also art work by Charles Gaines in same location.) New York (NY). Randall Galleries. VINCENT D. SMITH: Dry Bones Series. April 11-28, 1984. Exhib. brochure, color illus., biog., exhibs., colls. Text by Sharon F. Patton. New York (NY). Resources Center, Whitney Museum of American Art. VINCENT SMITH. 1976. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Resources Center, Whitney Museum of American Art. VINCENT SMITH. 1972. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Spiral Gallery. Ju Ju Jass & Mo Jo Blues: The Monoprints of VINCENT SMITH. April 9-30, 1988. Exhib. brochure, color and b&w illus., exhibs., colls. [Traveled to: Mid Hudson Arts and Science Center, Poughkeepsie, NY.] Pictorial wraps. New York (NY). Studio Museum in Harlem. VINCENT D. SMITH: Drawings and Paintings. 1974. Solo exhibition. New York (NY). Studio Museum in Harlem. VINCENT SMITH: Paintings. 1969. Solo exhibition. Newark (NJ). Paul Robeson Galleries, Rutgers University. VINCENT D. SMITH: An Appreciation. January 25-February 24, 1994. 8 pp. exhib. brochure, color illus., bibliog. 4to (28 cm.), wraps. Announcement card, color illus. Patton, Sharon F. VINCENT D. SMITH - Images and Evocations. Terre Haute: Indiana University, 1985. In: Black American Literature Forum 19, No. 1 (Spring 1985):26-27 (illus.) Patton, Sharon F. VINCENT SMITH: Images and Evocations. 1985. In: Black American Literature Forum 19, No. 1 (Spring 1985):26-27. Patton, Sharon Frances (interviewer). VINCENT SMITH, Painter. New York: Hatch-Billops Collection, 1990. Oral history interview. In: Artist and Influence 9 (1990):142-155, photo of Smith. Pittsburgh (PA). Carnegie Institute, Burke Art Center. VINCENT D. SMITH. 1975. Solo exhibition. Pomona (NJ). Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. VINCENT SMITH: Paintings. April 3-26, 1997. Solo exhibition. Portland (ME). Portland Museum of Art. VINCENT SMITH: Recent Paintings. 1974. Solo exhibition. Poughkeepsie (NY). Mid-Hudson Arts and Science Center. VINCENT SMITH Monoprints. January 13-February 10, 1989. 20 pp. exhib. cat., 18 illus., photo of artist, biog., bibliog. Text by Sharon F. Patton. 4to, stapled wraps. First ed. Schenectady (NY). Schenectady Museum of Art. VINCENT D. SMITH: Passages East / West, A Retrospective - 1964-1989. October 15-November 13, 1989. 20 pp., 14 b&w illus. (including cover and photo of artist), chronol., exhibs., colls., bibliog., checklist of 36 works (paintings, drawings, prints). Text by Sharon F. Patton. Presented by Black Dimensions in Art, Inc. Oblong 4to, stapled wraps, b&w cover illus. First ed. SMITH, VINCENT. VINCENT SMITH: A Painter Looks Back [Interview]. New York: Steppingstones Press, 1984. In: Steppingstones Press, Iss. No. 0735-4789 (Anniversary Issue):77-85. Syracuse (NY). Community Folk Art Gallery, Syracuse University and Queens College Art Gallery. VINCENT SMITH. 1981. Exhib. cat., illus. Text by David Driskell. Washington (DC). Capital East Graphics. VINCENT SMITH. 1983. Solo exhibition. York, Hildreth. BOB BLACKBURN and the Printmaking Workshop. 1986. In: Black American Literature Forum 20, No. 1/2 (Spring - Summer, 1986):81-95. Includes brief mention of Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Robin Holder (with photo), Mohammad O. Khalil, Norman Lewis, Otto Neals, Mavis Pusey, Vincent Smith and John Wilson. [See: http://negroartist.com/writings/art.htm] GENERAL BOOKS AND GROUP EXHIBITIONS: ABIDJAN (Cote d'Ivoire). Galerie d'Art Mitkal. Retour aux sources: Une exposition en Afrique d'artistes Afro-Américains. October 21-November 21, 1980. 24 pp. exhib. cat., 8 color illus., biog. for each artist. Intros. by Christiane Houphouet-Boigny and by curator Peg Alston. Exhibition includes 8 artists: Edward Clark, Barkley Hendricks, Bill Hutson, Howardena Pindell, Vincent D. Smith, Pheoris West, William T. Williams, Richard Yarde. The artists were invited by the government of the Ivory Coast to exhibit their work, and all were invited to the show, and to spend a week as guests of the government. Sq. 8vo (8 x 9 in.), wraps. AMHERST (MA). University of Massachusetts. Drum 15, nos. 1 & 2 (1986). 1986. This Issue includes art by Adger Cowans, Murry DePillars, Jeff Donaldson, David Driskell, Sam Gilliam, Ifeoma Obianwu, Vincent Smith, James E. Tatum. Cover by Tatum. 4to (11 x 8.5 in.), wraps. ANDREWS, BENNY. Art: The African Connection. 1977. In: Encore American & Worldwide News Vol. 6 (August 1, 1977):35. Mentions the use of African symbolism and its influence on contemporary art. Mentions Sargent Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Hale Woodruff, Dindga McCannon, James Sepyo, Otto Neals, Ademola Olugebefola, James Phillips, Clarence Morgan, Pheoris West, Charles Searles, Alfred Smith, Vincent Smith, Africobra group. ANDREWS, BENNY and Rudolf Baranik, eds. Attica Book. South Hackensack, NJ: Customs Communications Systems, 1972. By the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition and Artists and Writers Protest Against the War in Vietnam. ix, 47 leaves, b&w illus. Artists & poets. Includes numerous African American artists: Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Dana Chandler, Leroy Clarke, Art Coppedge, J. Brooks Dendy, Melvin Edwards, Al Hollingsworth, Manuel Hughes, Cliff Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Faith Ringgold, Vincent Smith. (Numerous leftist white artists involved as well: Antonioni Frasconi, Leon Golub, Jacob Landau, Alice Neel, Robert Morris, Nancy Spero, Ronald King, D. Cusic, among others.) Folio (36 x 28 cm.), pictorial wraps. First ed. ATKINSON, J. EDWARD, ed. Black Dimensions in Contemporary American Art. New York: NAL Plume, 1971. 127 pp., 74 color illus. Intro. by David C. Driskell. Includes fifty (thirteen women) contemporary artists with brief informative notes on each. A broad range of style and subject matter. Includes: Benny Andrews, Calvin Bailey, John T. Biggers, Arthur Britt, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Arthur Carraway, Bernie Casey, Don Concholar, Mary Reed Daniel, Alonzo Davis, Juette Day, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Eugenia Dunn, Marion Epting, Russell T. Gordon, David Hammons, Phillip Hampton, Marvin Harden, Wilbur Haynie, Richard Hunt, Barbara J. Jones (Hogu), Lois Mailou Jones, Eddie Jack Jordan, Sr., Lemuel Joyner, Henri Linton, Jimmy Mosley, Ademola Olugebefola, John Outterbridge, William Pajaud, James D. Parks, Delilah Pierce, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Lucille D. (Malkia) Roberts, Arthur Rose, Nancy Rowland, Marion Sampler, Jewel Simon, Ray Saunders, Leo Twiggs, Alma Thomas, Vincent D. Smith, Royce H. Vaughn, James Watkins, Charles White, Garrett Whyte, John W. Wilson, James A. Young. 8vo (8 x 5.4 in.), pictorial printed cloth. First ed. ATLANTA (GA). Atlanta Life Insurance Co. The First Annual Atlanta Life National Art Competition and Exhibition. November 21-, 1980. Juried by Richard Long, Samella Lewis, Barry Gaither. Artists exhibited include: Benny Andrews, George Balams, Willie Birch, Shirley Bolton, Douglas Boyd, Yvonne Brown, Charles Bryan, Irene Bryant, (Viola) Burley Leak, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Joshua B. Butler, Arthur Carraway, Juan Martin, Elizabeth Catlett, Gerald Duane Coleman, Michael Cummings, Morris Dawson, William Duffy, Tina Dunkley, Ed Dwight, Milton Fletcher, Ausbra Ford, Christopher Gonzalez, Phyllis Gooden, Eugene Grigsby, Ed Hamilton, Philip Hampton, Michael D. Harris, Adrienne W. Hoard, Joseph Holston, Marian Howard, J. D. Jackson, E(lliott) C. Jones, Charles Joyner, Kai Kambel, Kofi Kayiga, James King, Clayton Lang Jr., Velma Jean Ludaway, Robert J. Martin, Jerome B. Meadows, Jill N. Parker, James Dallas Parks, James B. Pasley, Curtis Patterson, John T. Riddle Jr., Thom Shaw, Edgar Sorrells-Adewale, Vincent D. Smith, Paul Goodnight, Carlton Omar Thompson, Yvonne Tucker, Curtis Tucker, Leo Twiggs, Chester Williams, Gilberto Wilson, Winston Wingo, Rip Woods, Yvette Woods; guest artists: Jewel Simon, Joy Ballard Peters, Freddie Styles, Arthur Parks, Maurice Pennington, James Adair, Evelyn Mitchell. Wraps. ATLANTA (GA). Atlanta Life Insurance Co. The Ninth Annual Atlanta Life National Art Competition and Exhibition. 1989. Exhib. cat. Included: Willie Birch, Louis Delsarte (purchase award), Albert Lavergne, Chuck Douglas, Ken Falana (Mixed Media purchase award; 2nd Place Painting purchase award; 2nd Place Printmaking purchase award) (3), MacArthur Goodwin, Michael D. Harris, Calvin Hooks, Charnelle Holloway, Stephanie Jackson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Kazi Lawrence, James Pate, Robert (Bobby) Scroggins, Vincent Smith, Richard Watson, Chester Williams, Gloria Williams. ATLANTA (GA). Atlanta Life Insurance Co. The Tenth Annual Atlanta Life National Art Competition and Exhibition. February-March, 1990. Group exhibition. Jurors: Camille Billops, Curtis Patterson, Elizabeth Catlett (appointed but too ill to serve), Jesse Hill, Jr. Artists exhibited included: Amalia Amaki, William Anderson (purchase award), Kwabena Ampofo-Anti, Joy Ballard-Peters (purchase award), Garry Biggs, Jacqueline Bontemps, Willie Buchanan (purchase award), Harriet Buckley, Michael Bynum, Anthony Cammack, Carol Carter, April Chartrand, Kevin Cole, William Cooper, Andy Cunningham, Jr., Walt Davis, Willis [Bing] Davis, Louis Delsarte, Robert Dilworth, Chuck Douglas, William Duffy (purchase award), Ed Dwight, Herbert Edwards, Kenneth Falana (printmaking purchase award), Robert Foster, Devery Freeman (purchase award), Eddie Granderson, Karl Hall, Reynaldo Hernandez, Vandorn Hinnant (purchase award), Raymond Holbert, Robin Holder (purchase award), Charnelle Holloway, Charles Holmes (purchase award), Stefanie Jackson, Walter James, Rosalyn Johnson, Ted Jones, Carolyn Martin, Robert Martin, Toby Martin (purchase award), Valerie Maynard (purchase award), Oscar McNary, Jerome Meadows, Ben Mercer, Eleanor Merritt, Gary L. Moore, Velma Morris (purchase award), Freddy Norman, Joseph Norman (purchase award), James Padgett, T. Maurice Pennington, Lonnie Powell, Valerie Respress, John Riddle, Jr., Hilda Robinson, Laverne Ross, Thom Shaw, Mariah Spann, Robert Spencer, Roy Vinson Thomas, Darlene Tyree (purchase award), Lamonte Westmoreland (purchase award), Cynthia White, Lavon Van Williams, Jr., Gilberto Wilson, Winston Wingo, Aundreta Wright, Theresa Young. Listings for Current Art Collection by year of acquisition include: 1980--Jerome B. Meadows, Elizabeth Catlett, William Duffy, James B. Pasley, George Balams, Phillip Hampton, Tina Dunkley, Michael Cummings, Thom Shaw, Robert Martin, Mark Herring; 1980-81, Maurice Pennington, Lev Mills, Freddie Styles, John Riddle; 1981-- Arturo Lindsay, Geraldine McCullough, Kathy E. Harper, Lethia Robertson, Tina Dunkley, Bisa Washington, Terry Hunter (2), Leroy Porter, James B. Pasley, Rudolph Robinson, Roger Murphy, Ben Jones, John Riddle; 1981-82, Paul Goodnight, Robert Dilworth, Phoebe Beasley, Lev Mills, Ted Jones (2), Bing Davis, Ayokunle Odeleye; 1982--Hale Woodruff, Thom Shaw, James E. Pate, Mark E. Morse, R. Martin, Michael Harris, John T. Scott, Freddie Styles, Lamerol A. Gatewood, Robert Peppers, Evelyn Terry, Tarrance Corbin, Richard Jordan, Carlton Thornton, Geraldine McCullough; 1984--Terry Adkins, Clemon Smith (2), Ellsworth Ausby, James E. Duprée, Charles Joyner, Carol A. Carter, Joyce Wellman, William Moore, George Balams, Willie Birch, Freddie Styles, Sana Musasama, Stanley Wilson, Scott; 1985: April M Chartrand, Carol Carter, Arthur Carraway, Cynthia Hawkins, Michael D. Harris, Shaw, Leroy Johnson, Tyrone Geter, Adger Cowans, Robert Martin, Lev Mills, Walter Jackson, Andrew Cunningham, Jr., Sidney V. Barkley, Frank Toby Martin, Jewel Simon (2) [plus listed as 1981 acquisition]; 1986: Harvey L. Johnson, Gall Shaw Clemons, Allen B. Poindexter, Michael Ellison, Kenneth Falana, Kevin Hamilton, Bertrand D. Phillips, Bob Helton, John H. Brown, Susan Thompson, Tina Dunkley, Louis J. Delsarte, Robert Martin, Lamonte Westmoreland, Kevin E. Cole, Debra D. Pressley, Ulysses Marshall, Ed Hamilton, Frank Toby Martin, Sana Musasama; 1987--Carlos F. Peterson (sc), Michael Ellison, Robert Spencer, Ted Jones, Lawrence Huff, William Anderson, Otis G. Sanders, James Green (fiber artist), Pat Ward Williams, James Maceo Rodgers, Robert Martin, Roy Vinson Thomas, Dewey Crumpler, Martin Payton, Curtis Tucker; 1988--Hilda C. Robinson, James E. Pate, Louis Delsarte, Falana, Stefanie Jackson, Holder, Wadsworth Jarrell, R. V. Thomas, Floyd E. Newsum, Angela Franklin, James E. Duprée, Robin M. Chandler, Jesse Guinyard, Jr., Dewey E. Crumpler, Charnelle Holloway; 1989 -- Louis Delsarte, Chuck Douglas, Ken Falana (3) MacArthur Goodwin, Calvin Hooks, Charnelle Holloway, Stephanie Jackson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Kazi Lawrence, James Pate, Robert (Bobby) Scroggins, Vincent Smith, Richard Watson, Gloria Williams. 8vo, wraps. ATLANTA (GA). Spelman College. Paintings and Drawings: Vincent Smith and Howardena Pindell. 1971. Two-person exhibition. BALTIMORE (MD). Baltimore Museum of Art. Marking the Decades: Prints, 1960-1990. 1992. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. BERLIN (Germany). Staatliche Kunsthalle. Art and Culture of the American Labor Movement. 1983. Group exhibition. Included Vincent D. Smith. [Traveled to Kassel, Stockholm, Chicago, New York, Paris, Nice, Rome, and Zurich.] BIRMINGHAM (MI). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. African American Artists. 1940 through 1960. January 21-March 6, 1994. Group exhibition. Included: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Robert Blackburn, Edward Clark, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Herbert Gentry, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, William Edouard Scott, Vincent Smith, Robert Thompson. BIRMINGHAM (MI). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. Contemporary African American Artists. March, 1994. Group exhibition. Included: Nanette Carter, Carol Ann Carter, Ed Clark, Robert Colescott, Herbert Gentry, Richard Hunt, Al Loving, Allie McGhee, Tyrone Mitchell, Joe Overstreet, Howardena Pindell, Raymond Saunders, Vincent Smith, Jack Whitten. BONTEMPS, ARNA ALEXANDER, ed. Choosing: An Exhibit of Changing Perspectives in Modern Art and Art Criticism by Black Americans, 1925-1985. Hampton (VA): Hampton University, 1985. 142 pp. exhib. cat., color and b&w illus., biogs., photo and illus. for each artist. Curated by Leslee Stradford. Essays by David Driskell, Keith Morrison (on printmaking), Allan Gordon, and Arna Bontemps include many artists not in the show. Artists exhibited include: Benny Andrews, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Moe Brooker, Vivian E. Browne, Elizabeth Catlett, Catti, Claude Clark, Houston Conwill, Emilio Cruz, Mary Reed Daniel, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, David Driskell, Ed Dwight, Allan Edmunds, Sam Gilliam, Ed Hamilton, Michael Harris, Maren Hassinger, Barkley Hendricks, Robin Holder, Margo Humphrey, Richard Hunt, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Persis Jennings, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Juan Logan, Ed Love, Geraldine McCullough, Lloyd McNeill, Percy Martin, Keith Morrison, Nefertiti, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Joe Overstreet, Gregory Page, Howardena Pindell, Martin Puryear, John Rhoden, Raymond Saunders, Joyce Scott, Clemon Smith, Frank Smith, Vincent Smith, Sylvia Snowden, Nelson Stevens, Lou Stovall, Lloyd McNeill, Robert Stull, Alma Thomas, Eugene Roy Vango, Jack Whitten, William T. Williams, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde, James L. Wells, Charles White. [Traveled to Portsmouth Museum, Portsmouth, VA; Chicago State University, Chicago, IL; Howard University, Washington, DC.] 4to, cloth, d.j. First ed. BOSTON (MA). Institute of Contemporary Art. A Selection of American Art 1946-1976, the Skowhegan School. 1976. 194 pp. exhib. cat., 88 works by 87 artists (about a dozen women artists and four African American artists included in the pantheon), b&w illus., each accompanied by text. Intro. by Lloyd Goodrich; texts by Bernarda Shahn, Gabriella Jepson, and Allen Ellenzweig. Included: David Driskell, Jacob Lawrence, Vincent D. Smith, William T. Williams. [Traveled to: Colby Museum of Art, Waterville, ME.] Oblong 4to, wraps. First ed. BOSTON (MA). Museum of Fine Arts. Afro-American Artists: New York and Boston. May 19-June 23, 1970. 92 pp. exhib. cat, 67 b&w illus. of work by 69 artists, exhib. checklist. Co-curated by Edmund Barry Gaither and artist Barnet Rubinstein. Intro. by Edmund B. Gaither. Important early exhibition. Includes: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Malcolm Bailey, Ellen Banks, Romare Bearden, Robert Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Ronald Boutte, Lynn Bowers, Frank Bowling, Marvin Brown, Calvin Burnett, Dana C. Chandler, John Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, Avel DeKnight, Henry DeLeon, Milton Derr (as Milton Johnson), Stanley Pinckney, James Denmark, Reginald Gammon, Felrath Hines, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Bill Howell, Zell Ingram, Gerald Jackson, Daniel L. Johnson, Ben Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Tonnie O. Jones, Cliff Joseph, Harriet Kennedy, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Edward McCluney, Jr., Algernon Miller, Joe Overstreet, Louise Parks, Stanley Pinckney, Jerry Pinkney, John W. Rhoden, Bill Rivers, Mahler Ryder, Raymond Saunders, Thomas Sills, Alfred J. Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Richard Stroud, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, Lovett Thompson, Russ Thompson, Lloyd Toone, Luther Vann, Paul Waters, Richard Waters, Jack White, Yvonne Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde. Sq. 4to (26 cm.), pictorial self-wraps. First ed. BRITTON, CRYSTAL A. African-American Art: The Long Struggle. New York: Smithmark, 1996. 128 pp., 107 color plates (mostly full-page and double-page), notes, index. Artists include: Terry Adkins, Charles Alston, Amalia Amaki, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, William E. Artis, Radcliffe Bailey, Xenobia Bailey, James P. Ball, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, Edward Mitchell Bannister, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, David Bustill Bowser, Grafton Tyler Brown, James Andrew Brown, Kay Brown, Vivian Browne, Beverly Buchanan, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, Carole Byard, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ed Clark, Robert Colescott, Houston Conwill, Eldzier Cortor, Renée Cox, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Giza Daniels-Endesha, Dave [the Potter], Thomas Day, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Leonardo Drew, Robert S. Duncanson, William Edmondson, Melvin Edwards, Minnie Evans, William Farrow, Gilbert Fletcher, James Forman, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Michele Godwin, David Hammons, Edwin Harleston, William A. Harper, Palmer Hayden, Thomas Heath, white artist Jon Hendricks (no illus.), Robin Holder, May Howard Jackson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Lois Mailou Jones, Cliff Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie-Lee Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Juan Logan, Valerie Maynard, Dindga McCannon, Sam Middleton, Scipio Moorhead, Keith Morrison, Archibald J. Motley, Jr., Sana Musasama, Marilyn Nance, Gordon Parks, Marion Perkins, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Harriet Powers, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, Martin Puryear, Patrick Reason, Gary Rickson, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, Joyce J. Scott, William E. Scott, Charles Sebree, Lorna Simpson, William H. Simpson, Clarissa Sligh, Frank Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Nelson Stevens, Renée Stout, Freddie L. Styles, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Jean Toche (no illus.), Lloyd Toone, Bill Traylor, James Vanderzee, Annie E. Walker, William Walker, Laura Wheeler Waring, Carrie Mae Weems, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Grace Williams, Michael Kelly Williams, Pat Ward Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, Fred Wilson, Hale Woodruff, et al. 4to (32 cm.), pictorial boards, d.j. First ed. BRONX (NY). Bronx Museum of the Arts. Art in Process: Five Artists at Work. July 13-August, 1977. Exhib. brochure, biogs. Intro. by Beatrice Kalcut-Colby. Statement by the artists. Includes Vincent D. Smith. BROOKLYN (NY). 843 Studio Gallery. Masters of Collage. May 5-June 2, 1985. Group exhibition. Included: Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, Brenda Branch, Nanette Carter, James Denmark, Al Loving, Robert N. Scott, Vincent Smith. Announcement card. BROOKLYN (NY). Brooklyn College Art Gallery. Afro-American Artists Since 1950. April 15-May 18, 1969. 28 pp. exhib. cat., 21 b&w illus. and brief biog for each artist, cover by Romare Bearden. Includes 20 artists: Benny Andrews, Malcom Bailey, Betty Blayton, David Scott Brown, Vivian Browne, Floyd Coleman, Calvin Douglass, Reginald Gammon, Richard Hunt, Al Loving, Geraldine McCullough, Earl Miller, John Rhoden, Raymond Saunders, Thomas Sills, Alvin Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Bob Thompson, Russ Thompson, William T. Williams. 8vo (8.9 x 7.1 in.), wraps. First ed. BROOKLYN (NY). Brooklyn Museum of Art. Recollections: Candida Alvarez and Vincent Smith. 1979. Two-person exhibition of paintings. BROOKLYN (NY). Brooklyn Museum of Art, Community Gallery. West Indian-American Artists. October 31-December 5, 1976. 4 pp. brochure. Included: Aubrey Baker, Victor Bloise Jr., Muriel Bushelle, Cecil Cooper, George Ford, Waveney Hall, Clifford Hobbs, Michael Hurley, Jenneveve Johnson, Carmen Loving, Carlton Murrell, Vincent Smith, Brenda Stoute, Dudley Vacciana, Donald Walton. BROOKLYN (NY). Long Island University Gallery. Artists of Color. 1995. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith, et al. [Traveled to: Boise State University, Boise, ID.) BROOKLYN (NY). MoCADA Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art. From Challenge to Triumph: African American Prints & Printmaking, 1867-2002. Thru February 22, 2003. Important survey. Artists included: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Grafton Tyler Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret T. Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Crite, David C. Driskell, Allan Freelon, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Linda Hiwot, Robin Holder, Albert Huey, Mary Howard Jennings, Wilmer Jennings, William H. Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Ronald Joseph, Paul Keene, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Whitfield Lovell, Richard Mayhew, Lev T. Mills, Evangeline J. Montgomery, Otto Neals, Hayward Oubré, Howardena Pindell, Vincent Smith, Dread Scott, William E. Scott, Lou Stovall, Raymond Steth, Dox Thrash, Ruth Waddy, Cheryl Warrick, James Lesesne Wells, John Wilson, Charles White, Hale Woodruff. BROOKLYN (NY). Pratt Towers Art Exhibit. Benefit for Lorraine Hansberry. 1964. Includes Vincent D. Smith, et al. BROOKLYN (NY). Skylight Gallery, Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. Mosaic of the City ((Artists Against Racial Prejudice). 1990. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. BROOKLYN (NY). Spiral Gallery. Small Works of the Gallery Artists. December 2, 1987-January 2, 1988. Group exhibition. Included: Stanley Barnes, Wayne Clarke, Sandra Collier, Ernest Crichlow, James Denmark, Corinne Gaile, Leonard Gittens, Clifford Hobbs, Joseph Holston, Jayson Keeling, Fannie Lager, Karl McIntosh, Don Miller, Catherine Mills, Carlton Murrell, Diana N'Diaye, Otto Neals, Doris Price, Spencer Richards, Sydney Schenk, Vincent Smith, Ann Tanksley, Willie Tolbert, Lloyd Toone, Ron Walton, George Wilson. BROOKVILLE (NY). Hillwood Art Museum, Long Island University. BOB BLACKBURN's Printmaking Workshop: Artists of Color. 1992. 62, (2) pp., 74 illus. (8 color plates), biographies of over fifty artists. Intro. by Kay Walkingstick; text by Noah Jemisin. One of the early references to Blackburn's profound influence on the printmaking world, and still not focusing on his own prints. A tribute to the Printmaking Workshop with illus. of more than 70 artists who worked with Blackburn (approximately two thirds of those included are Black artists.) Includes: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, William Artis, Ellsworth Ausby, Henry Bannarn, Romare Bearden, Hameed Benjamin, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Betty Blayton, Marion Brown, Vivian Browne, Selma Burke, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Adger Cowans, Ernest Crichlow, Nadine DeLawrence, Louis Delsarte, Aaron Douglas, Melvin Edwards, Herbert Gentry, (John) Solace Glenn, Michele Godwin, Rex Goreleigh, Manuel Hughes, Zell Ingram, Noah Jemison, Ronald Joseph, Mohammad Omer Khalil, Jacob Lawrence, Spencer Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Norma Morgan, Sara Murrell, Otto Neals, Nefertiti, Lee Pate, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Augusta Savage, AJ Smith, Jr., Vincent Smith, Maxwell Taylor, Luther Vann, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams. [One of the most widely circulated exhibitions of African American art. Traveled to: Bronx River Art Center and Gallery, Bronx, NY; Bergstrom-Mahler Museum, Neenah, WI, October 3-November 21, 1993; ; Chicago Public Library, Chicago, IL, July 10-August 28, 1994; Telfair Academy of Art and Sciences, Savannah, GA, December 12, 1994-January 30, 1995; Fisk University, Nashville, TN, September 18, 1994-January 15, 1995; Albany Institute of History & Art, Albany, NY, September 3-December 31, 1995; Edwin A. Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita State University; Wichita, KS, April 16-June 4, 1995; The Roger Guffey Gallery; Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Kansas City, MO, February 5-March 26, 1995.] Small oblong 4to, wraps. First ed. CATTELL, JACQUES, ed. Who's Who in American Art 16. New York: Bowker, 1984. Curators who are not also artists are included in this bibliographic entry but are not otherwise listed in the database: We are NOT going to go through all of these volumes over the decades; this one is catalogued simply to record the degree to which living African American artists had entered the conciousness of the mainstream American art world as of 1984. [Should be consulted along with Falk's Who Was Who in American Art (1985) to complete the "awareness list" as of the mid-1980s.] 160 artists are included here along with 1000 pages of far more obscure white artists: p. 21, Benny Andrews, 33, Ellsworth Ausby, 50, Richmond Barthé; 57, Romare Bearden, 76, John Biggers, 83, Betty Blayton, 98, Frank Bowling, 108, Arthur Britt, 112, Wendell Brooks, 116, Marvin Brown, 117-18, Vivian Browne, 121, Linda Goode Bryant, 128, Calvin Burnett, 129, Margaret Burroughs, 132, Carole Byard, 133, Walter Cade, 148, Yvonne Pickering Carter, 168, Claude Clark, 178-79, Floyd Coleman, 179, Robert Colescott, 181, Paul Collins, 184, James Conlon, 188-89, Arthur Coppedge; 191, Eldzier Cortor, Averille Costley-Jacobs, 198, Allan Crite; 210, D'Ashnash-Tosi [Barbara Chase-Riboud], 213-14, Alonzo Davis, 219-20, Roy DeCarava, 222, Avel DeKnight, 226, Richard Dempsey, 228, Murry DePillars, 237, Raymond Dobard, 239, Jeff Donaldson, 243, John Dowell, 246, David Driskell, 256, Allan Edmunds, 256-57, James Edwards, 260, David Elder, 265, Whitney John Engeran, 267, Marion Epting, 270, Burford Evans, 271, Minnie Evans, 271-72, Frederick Eversley, 277, Elton Fax, 304, Charlotte Franklin, 315, Edmund Barry Gaither (curator), 317, Reginald Gammon, 325, Herbert Gentry, 326, Joseph Geran, 328, Henri Ghent (curator), 332, Sam Gilliam, 346, Russell Gordon, 354, Rex Goreleigh, 361, Eugene Grigsby, 375, Robert Hall, 380, Leslie King-Hammond (curator), 381, Grace Hampton, 385, Marvin Harden, 406, Barkley Hendricks, 418, Leon Hicks, 414, Freida High-Wasikhongo, 424-25, Al Hollingsworth, 428, Earl Hooks, 433, Humbert Howard, 439, Richard Hunt, 450, A. B. Jackson, Oliver Jackson; 451, Suzanne Jackson, 454, Catti James, Frederick James, 464, Lester L. Johnson; 467, Ben Jones, 467-68, Calvin Jones, 469, James Edward Jones, Lois Jones, 471, Theodore Jones, 489, Paul Keene; 492, James Kennedy, 495-96, Virginia Kiah, 535, Raymond Lark, 540-41, Jacob Lawrence, 546, Hughie Lee-Smith, 557, Samella Lewis, 586, Cheryl Ilene McClenney (arts admin.), 595, Anderson Macklin, 620, Philip Lindsay Mason, 625, Richard Mayhew, 597, Oscar McNary, 598, Kynaston McShine (curator), 610, 637, Marianne Miles a.k.a. Marianne; 638, Earl Miller, 640-41, Lev Mills, 649, Evangeline Montgomery; 653, Norma Morgan, 655, Keith Morrison, 657, Dewey Mosby (curator), 671, Otto Neals, 693, Ademola Olugebefola, 700, Hayward Oubré, John Outterbridge, Wallace Owens, 702, William Pajaud, 706, James Parks, 710, Curtis Patterson, 711, Sharon Patton (curator), 711-12, John Payne, 720, Regenia Perry (curator), 724, Bertrand Phillips; 727, Delilah Pierce, 728, Vergniaud Pierre-Noël, 729, Stanley Pinckney, Howardena Pindell, 744, Leslie Price, Arnold Prince, 747, Mavis Pusey, 752, Bob Ragland, 759, Roscoe Reddix, 763, Robert Reid, 768, John Rhoden, 772, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, 774, Faith Ringgold, 778, Lucille Roberts, 803, Mahler Ryder, 804, Betye Saar, 815, Raymond Saunders, 834, John Scott, 841, James Sepyo, 857, Thomas Sills, 859, Jewel Simon, 861, Merton Simpson, Lowery Sims (curator); 865, Van Slater, 869, Dolph Smith, 873, Vincent Smith, 886, Francis Sprout, 890-91, Shirley Stark, 898, Nelson Stevens, 920, Luther Stovall, 909, Robert Stull, 920, Ann Tanksley, James Tanner, 924, Rod Taylor, 922, William Bradley Taylor [Bill Taylor], 929, Elaine Thomas, 946, Curtis Tucker, 949, Leo Twiggs, 970, Larry Walker, 977, James Washington, 979, Howard Watson, 994, Amos White, 995, Franklin White, 996 Tim Whiten, 1001-2, Chester Williams, 1003, Randolph Williams, Todd Williams, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, 1005, Edward Wilson, George Wilson, 1005-6, John Wilson, 1007, Frank Wimberley, 1016, Rip Woods, 1017, Shirley Woodson, 1019, Bernard Wright, 1025, Charles Young, 1026, Kenneth Young, Milton Young. CHARLOTTESVILLE (VA). Bayly Art Museum, University of Virginia. Abstract/Abstracted: Contemporary American Paintings, Prints, and Photographs. December 21, 1990-April 7, 1991. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. CHICAGO (IL). Art Institute of Chicago. A Century of Collecting: African American Art in the Art Institute of Chicago. February 15-May 18, 2003. Group exhibition. Curated by Daniel Schulman, associate curator of modern and contemporary art. 60 artists (over half contemporary) including: Benny Andrews, Radcliffe Bailey, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Hilda Wilkinson Brown, Margaret Burroughs, William S. Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Edward Clark, Kerry Stuart Coppin, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Charles C. Dawson, Aaron Douglas, John E. Dowell, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Melvin Edwards, Walter Ellison, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, William Harper, George Herriman, Earlie Hudnall, Jr., Richard Hunt, Joshua Johnson, Rashid Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Joseph Kersey, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Glenn Ligon, Kerry James Marshall, Willie Middlebrook, Keith Morrison, Archibald J. Motley, Marion Perkins, Allie Pettway, Jessie T. Pettway, Robert Pious, Adrian Piper, Horace Pippin, Martin Puryear, Faith Ringgold, William Edouard Scott, Vincent Smith, Nelson Stevens, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, James Vanderzee, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, Gearldine Westbrook, Charles White, Sarah Ann Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Joseph E. Yoakum. CHICAGO (IL). Art Institute of Chicago. African Americans in Art: Selections from the Art Institute of Chicago. 1999. Museum studies, v. 24, no. 2, 140-272, illus. (some in color), substantial bibliog. pp. 260-272. Essays by Susan F. Rossen, Colin L. Westerbeck, Amy M. Mooney (on Archibald J. Motley, Jr.), Andrea D. Barnwell and Kirsten P. Buick, Daniel Schulman (very important text on Marion Perkins), Cherise Smith (on Simpson, Weems and Willie Robert Middlebrook). Artists include: Samuel J. Miller, Archibald J. Motley, Jr., Marion Perkins, Lorna Simpson; Carrie Mae Weems, Willie Robert Middlebrook, Joshua Johnson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Walter Ellison, Horace Pippin, James Vanderzee, Eldzier Cortor, Hilda Wilkinson Brown, William H. Johnson, Richmond Barthé, Beauford Delaney, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Margaret Burroughs, Roy DeCarava, Charles White, Elizabeth Catlett, Richard Hunt, Melvin Edwards, Vincent D. Smith; Robert Thompson, Joseph Yoakum, Alma Thomas, Romare Bearden, Adrian Piper, Kerry Coppin, Kerry James Marshall, Kara Walker. Topics include Frederick A. Douglass, definitions of African American Art, mixed media work, sculpture. 4to (26 cm.), wraps. CHICAGO (IL). Art Institute of Chicago. Since the Harlem Renaissance: Sixty Years of African American Art. May 18-August 25, 1996. Group exhibition. Included: Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Vincent D. Smith, Kara Walker, et al. CHICAGO (IL). Illinois Arts Council and Illinois Bell Telephone Lobby Gallery. Black American Artists / 71. 1971-1972. 12 pp. catalogue of an important traveling exhibition circulated by the Illinois Arts Council and Illinois Bell; checklist of 136 works by 59 artists, 28 b&w illus., address list for many of the artists. Intro. and curated by Robert H. Glauber; statements by some of the artists on the topic of being a Black artist in 1971. Ralph Arnold, Sam Gilliam, Russell T. Gordon, Joseph B. Ross Jr., and by Edward K. Taylor (President of the Harlem Cultural Council.). Artists included in the exhibition: Benny Andrews, Ralph Arnold, Romare Bearden, Cleveland Bellow, Betty Blayton, Lynn Bowers, Vivian Browne, Robert Carter, Bernie Casey, LeRoy Clarke, Floyd Coleman, Dan Concholar, Dale Davis, Avel DeKnight, Richard Dempsey, David Driskell, Michael Esteves, Babatunde Folayemi, Sam Gilliam, Russell T. Gordon, David Hammons, Ben Hazard, Bill Howell, Raymond Howell, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, Tonnie Jones, James DeWitt King, Jr., Jacob Lawrence, Leon Lank Leonard, Sr., Richard Mayhew, Geraldine McCullough, Charles McGee, Allie McGhee, Algernon Miller, Arthur Monroe, Keith Morrison, Ademola Olugebefola, Joe Overstreet, William Pajaud, Stephanie Pogue, Leslie Price, Noah Purifoy, Robert Reid, John T. Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Joseph B. Ross, Jr., Raymond Saunders, John T. Scott, Vincent Smith, Alma Thomas, Timothy Washington, Charles White, Stanley Whitney, Walter J. Williams, Rip Woods, Kenneth Young, Milton Young. [Traveled to: Chicago, Illinois State Museum, Springfield (IL), Sloan Galleries, Valparaiso (IL), Peoria Art Guild, Peoria (IL), Burpee Gallery, Rockford (IL), Quincy (IL), Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, Kalamazoo [MI], University of Iowa Art Museum, Iowa City (IA), November 2, 1971-January 2, 1972, and perhaps other venues.] [Review: (Unattrib.) "Unknown black artists get chance to show their work," Jet (February 4, 1971):48-49, 4 b&w photos of artists and work.] 4to, stapled wraps. Individuated covers printed for at least two locations. COLLEGE PARK (MD). University of Maryland Art Gallery. Narratives of African American Art and Identity: The David C. Driskell Collection. 1998. 192 pp., 94 color plates, 33 b&w illus., checklist of 100 works by 61 artists, biogs., bibliog. Text by Terry Gipps. Important artist's collection. Includes: Terry Adkins, Edward M. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Grafton Tyler Brown, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Sr., Robert Colescott, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Robert S. Duncanson, Melvin Edwards, Minnie Evans, Meta Warrick Fuller, Sam Gilliam, Michael D. Harris, James V. Herring, Earl J. Hooks, Margo Humphrey, Clementine Hunter, Wilmer Jennings, William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Jerome Meadows, William McNeil, Sam Middleton, Keith Morrison, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, James Phillips, Stephanie Pogue, P.H. Polk, Charles Ethan Porter, James A. Porter, Martin Puryear, Ray Saunders, Augusta Savage, Charles Sebree, Frank Smith, Vincent Smith, Gilda Snowden, Frank Stewart, Lou Stovall, Henry O. Tanner, Bill Traylor, Alma Thomas, Yvonne Edwards Tucker, James VanDerZee, Laura Wheeler Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, Hale Woodruff. 4to (12 x 9 in.), cloth, d.j. First ed. COLLEGE PARK (MD). University of Maryland Art Gallery. Successions: Prints by African-American Artists from the Jean and Robert Steele Collection. April 1-29, 2002. 48 pp. exhib. cat., 26 color & b&w illus., checklist of 62 works by 45 artists, glossary of terms. Intro. by David C. Driskell; statement by the collectors, text by Adrienne L. Childs. Includes: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Moe Brooker, Calvin Burnett, Nora Mae Carmichael, Elizabeth Catlett, Kevin Cole, Robert Colescott, Allan Rohan Crite, Louis Delsarte, David Driskell, Allan Edmunds, Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam, Varnette Honeywood, Margo Humphrey, Paul Keene, Wadsworth Jarrell, Lois Mailou Jones, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Percy B. Martin, Tom Miller, Evangeline Montgomery, Keith Morrison, Joseph Norman, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Anita Philyaw, Stephanie Pogue, John T. Riddle, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Preston Sampson, Frank Smith, Vincent Smith, Lou Stovall, James L. Wells, William T. Williams, John Wilson. [Traveled to: Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, AL; David Driskell Center, University of Maryland.] 4to (11 x 8.5 in.), pictorial wraps. First ed. COLLEGE PARK (PA). Pennsylvania State University. Art Against Apartheid. 1985. Group exhibition. Curated by Willie Birch. Includes Willie Birch, Whitfield Lovell, Charles McGill, James Phillips, Vincent D. Smith, et al. [Also exhibited at Limelight Gallery, Henry Street Settlement, NY, 1984.] COLLEGE PARK (PA). Pennsylvania State University. Twenty Contemporary Printmakers. 1978. Exhibition of prints from Bob Blackburn's workshop, assembled by Richard Mayhew. Includes 20 artists. Includes Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Vivian Browne, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Richard Hunt, Mohammed Omer Khalil, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Stephanie Pogue, Mavis Pusey, Vincent D. Smith, Sharon E. Sutton, Benjamin L. Wigfall, John Wilson, Wendy Wilson. Exhibition flyer. COLUMBUS (OH). Columbus Museum of Art. People, Places & Things: An African-American Perspective. September 5, 1992-February 28, 1993. Exhib. cat., illus. Curated by Deirdre D. Hamlar. Includes: Larry Collins, William Hawkins, Carlyle Johnson, Roman Johnson, Debra Priestly, Aminah Robinson, Vincent D. Smith, Pheoris West. DEACON, DEBORAH. The Art and Artifacts Collection of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture: A Preliminary Catalogue. 1981. In: Bulletin of Research on the Humanities Issue 84, no. 2, 1981:145-65. EDMUNDS, ALLAN L. and LOUISE D. STONE. Three Decades of American Printmaking: The Brandywine Workshop Collection. Manchester: Hudson Hills, 2004. 240 pp., 126 color plates, 21 b&w illus., bibliog., index. Texts by Halima Taha, Lois H. Johnson and Patricia Smith, Keith A. Morrison, and Claude Elliott. Among the artists who have had prints made at Brandywine are: Candida Alvarez, Emma Amos, Akili Ron Anderson, Benny Andrews, Roland Ayers, Belkis Ayon, Romare Bearden, Ron Bechet, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Terry Boddie, Berrisford Boothe, James Brantley, Moe Brooker, Marvin P. Brown, Samuel J. Brown, Weldon Butler, Selma Burke, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Kevin E. Cole, William Cordova, Adger Cowans, Alonzo Davis, Louis Delsarte, John E. Dowell, David Driskell, James Dupree, Walter Edmonds, Allen Edmunds, Melvin Edwards, Rodney Ewing, Agbo Folarin, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Simon Gouverneur, Leamon Green, Eugene Grigsby, Maren Hassinger, Barkley L. Hendricks, Leon Hicks, Vandorn Hinnant, Margo Humphrey, Curlee Raven Holton, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Wadsworth Jarrell, Paul F. Keene, Jr., Lois Mailou Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Souleymane Keita, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Arturo Lindsay, Alvin Loving, Deryl Mackie, Jimmy Mance, Percy Martin, Valerie Maynard, Donna Meeks, Charles Mills, Ibrahim Miranda, Quentin Morris, Keith Morrison, Evangeline Montgomery, Quentin Morris, Abdouleye Ndoye, Floyd Newsum, Magdalene Odundo, Ademola Olugebefola, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Laurie Ourlicht, Joe Overstreet, William Pajaud, Howardena Pindell, James Phillips, Michael Platt, Eric Pryor, Leo Robinson, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Juan Sanchez, John T. Scott, Charles Searles, AJ Smith, Frank Smith, George Smith, Vincent Smith, Sylvia Snowden, Edgar Sorrells-Adewale, David Stephens, Hubert Taylor, Evelyn Terry, Phyllis Thompson, Kaylynn Sullivan Twotrees, Larry Walker, John Wade, Richard Watson, James Lesesne Wells, Stanley Whitney, Carl Joe Williams, Michael Kelly Williams, Pat Ward Williams, Gilberto Wilson, Clarence Wood, Shirley Woodson, and Barbara Chase-Riboud. [Also issued in a limited numbered edition of 396 copies, including three offset lithographs by Sam Gilliam, each signed and numbered in pencil, bound in red cloth, in matching cloth covered slipcase.] 4to (12.4 x 9.2 in.), cloth, d.j. First ed. FOLLEY-COOPER, MARQUETTE. Seeing Jazz: Artists and Writers on Jazz. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1997. 144 pp., 95 color and b&w illus., list of plates. Foreword by Clark Terry; afterword by Milt Hinton. Published in association with the traveling exhibition organized by the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Writers and visual artists include (among others): James Baldwin, Gwendolyn Brooks, Count Basie, Smokey Robinson; artists: Terry Adkins, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Amiri Baraka, Anthony Barboza, Romare Bearden, Miles Davis, David Driskell, Jarvis Grant, Roland Jean, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Ed Love, Archibald J. Motley, Jr., Ademola Olugebefola, Gordon Parks, James Phillips, Raymond Saunders, Charles Searles, Vincent Smith, Renée Stout, Ann Tanksley, Denise Ward-Brown, William T. Williams, and dozens more. [Traveled to: Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, FL; Jazz Gallery, New York, NY; Western Gallery, Bellingham, WA; Middlebury College Museum of Art, Middlebury, VT; Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute of Art, Utica, NY; Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, TN; Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, WV; Museum of the Southwest, Midland, TX.] Sq. 4to, cloth, d.j. First ed. GARDEN CITY (NY). Firehouse Gallery, Nassau Community College. Black Artists. Thru October 22, 1968. Group exhibition. Included: Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Robert Carter, Caliman G. Coxe, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, James Denmark, Reginald Gammon, Felrath Hines, Al Hollingsworth, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Nathaniel Pinkney, Raymond Saunders, Al Smith, Vincent Smith, Daniel Toone, Paul Waters, Frank Wimberley, Hale Woodruff. [Review: "Black Artists Show at Nassau College," New York Amsterdam News, October 12, 1968.] GARDEN CITY (NY). Firehouse Gallery, Nassau Community College. The Impact of Slavery: It’s More Than Just Another Art Show. November 12-December 20, 1994. Group exhibition. Included: Faith Ringgold, Vincent Smith, et al. GREAT NECK (NY). Great Neck Library. Contemporary Black Artists in America [7th Annual Black Art Exhibition]. February 12-March 23, 1978. Exhib. cat., biogs. Included: Natalie Barkley, James Beacon, Earl Broglin, James Brown, Raymond Campos, James C. Counts, Nicholas Davis, Willis Davis, Frank Frazier, Cameral C. Harrison, Denise Hawkins, Earl Hill, Linda Hiwot, Mari Holmes, Marcia Jameson, Edward Martin, Jacqueline Sinton Martin, Eleanor Merritt, Don Miller, Myrna E. Morris, Carlton Murrell, Otto Neals, Mary Pearsall, Barbara Vernice Powell, Gwendolyn Rabowski, Helen Evans Ramsaran, Don Robertson, Lethia Robertson, Edmund A. Smart, Vincent Smith, Ann Tanksley, Ronald Walton, Ellwood M. White, Emmett Wigglesworth, George Lewis Wilson, Frank Wimberley, Charles Winslow. GREENSBORO (NC). Weatherspoon Art Gallery, University of North Carolina. The 19th Annual Exhibition of Art on Paper 1983. November 13-December 11, 1983. Exhib. cat., illus., checklist. Foreword, Gilbert Carpenter. Includes: Joseph Delaney, Howardena Pindell, Vincent Smith, and Bill Traylor. 4to, wraps. GRIGSBY, J. EUGENE. Art and Ethnics: Background for Teaching Youth in a Pluralistic Society. Dubuque (IA): Wm. C. Brown Company, 1977. 147 pp., illus. Includes: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, William Artis, Malcolm Bailey, Mike Bannarn, Edward M. Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Selma Burke, George Washington Carver, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Dan R. Concholar, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Dale Brockman Davis, Beauford Delaney, James T. Diggs, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Robert S. Duncanson, William M. Farrow, Perry Ferguson, Elton Fax, Doyle Foreman, Meta Vaux Fuller, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Joseph W. Gilliard, Manuel Gomez, Rex Goreleigh, Ethel Guest, Edwin A Harleston, Palmer Hayden, Esther P. Hill, Felrath Hines, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Richard, Hunt, Bob Jefferson, Joshua Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Cliff Joseph, Edward Judie, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Samella Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Hughie Lee-Smith, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Earl B. Miller, E.J. Montgomery, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald J. Motley, Robert L. Neal, John Outterbridge, Joe Overstreet, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Patrick Reason, Gary Rickson, Augusta Savage, Merton D. Simpson, Albert A. Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Neptune Thurston, Ruth Waddy, Laura Wheeler Waring, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Rip Woods, Hartwell Yeargans. HAMPTON (VA). Hampton University. The International Review of African American Art Vol. 17, no. 2 (1998). 1998. This issue contains: "William Pajaud and the Jazz Funeral Tradition;" article on Danny Simmons and the jazz hip-hop visual tradition empire by Cherilyn Wright; "Aaron Douglas at 100" by Aaronetta Pierce. "Imagining the Amistad;" William Tolliver 1951-2000 (obituary); "New Thoughts About That Old Black Magic" by Juliette Harris; "A Mother's Grief; an Artist's Response" by Leatha Mitchell; "A Publishing First!" by Harriet Kelley; "Art; Love and Sex In Black and White" by Stephanie Saft-Phelan; "Deborah Willis; Artist and Scholar" by Winston Kennedy. Artwork: William Pajaud (cover), Edouard Duval-Carrié, Allan Rohan Crite, Palmer Hayden, Claude Clark, Elizabeth Catlett, Leroy Clark, Vincent Smith, Antonio Carreno, Danny Simmons, Aaron Douglas, Colleen Coleman, Howardena Pindell, Ed Hamilton, Delphine Fawundu, Jeffery Henson Scales, William Tolliver, Pierre Legrain, Sylvia Snowden, Jacob Lawrence, Samella Lewis, Addison N. Scurlock, Ted Pontiflet. 4to, wraps. HAMPTON (VA). Hampton University. The International Review of African American Art Vol. 17, no. 3 (1998). 2000. This issue focuses on collectors, including former and current NBA players and musicians who are art collectors. Obituary for John T. Biggers. Images of wrok by: Phoebe Beasley (cover), Jacob Lawrence, John Biggers, Norman Lewis, Benny Andrews, Elizabeth Catlett, Charles White, Luther Hampton, Robert Colescott, John Wesley Hardrick, Kevin Cole, Charles Alston, Sam Gilliam, Vincent Smith, Alvin Loving; Jr., Edward Clark, Nanette Carter, Leroy Campbell, Dewey Crumpler, Mildred Howard, José Bedia, Edgar Arceneaux, David Newton, Whitfield Lovell, Hughie Lee-Smith, Robert Tomlin, John Henry Adams, Laura W. Waring, Clementine Hunter, Charles E. Porter, Aaron Douglas, Philemonia Williamson, Hale Woodruff, Ann Tanksley, Jonathan Green, Romare Bearden, Ernie Barnes, Tom Miller, Faith Ringgold, Ernest Crichlow, Ayokunle Odeleye, Amalia Amaki, Mary Jane McKnight, Howardena Pindell, William Carter, Margaret Burroughs, white artist Charles Cullen, J. Clinton Devillis, Meta Vaux Fuller, Samuel O. Collins, Nina Buxenbaum, Larry Walker; photographs listed by an unidentifiable artist listed as "Van Dyke Brown"(?) which is a photo process; plus documentary photographs of collectors and artists. 4to, wraps. HAMPTON (VA). Hampton University. The International Review of African American Art Vol. 17, no. 4 (2001). 2001. 64 pp., mostly color illus., documentary photos. Feature articles on Lorraine Williams Bolton, Lawrence A. Jones, Hayward L. Oubre, Claude Clark; reviews of exhibitions by Horace Pippin, Martin Puryear; a WPA Show at the Malcolm Brown Gallery, Renee Cox, Kara Walker, Larry Walker, Vincent D. Smith, Charles McGill, Todd Murphy, Beatrice LeBreton; Louis Cameron, and the Studio Museum "Freestyle" exhibition; as well as an article on Andew Wyeth's portraits of his African American friends and neghbors at Chadd's Ford, PA. Images of artwork by all of the above and Ernest Alexander, Aaron Bain, Caspar Banjo, Sharon Barnes, Terry Boddie, Leroy Campbell, Melvin Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Francks Deceus, Malaika Favorite, Reginald Gammon, Leamon Green, D.K. Greene (?Donald O. Greene?), Adler Guerrier, Paul Houzell, Ed Hughes, Vincent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Gwendolyn Knight, Todd Murphy, Kori Newkirk, Edsel Reid, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Andrew Turner, Hale Woodruff. 4to, wraps. Hartford (CT). CRT's Craftery Gallery. Master Printmaker ROBERT BLACKBURN Exhibition. October 29, 1995-March 30, 1996. Exhibition invitation card lists a concurrent exhibition of works from the Bob Blackburn Workshop archives. Includes the following black artists: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Betty Blayton, Vivian Browne, Elizabeth Catlett, Melvin W. Clark, Ernest Crichlow, Mslabe Dumile-Feni, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Herbert Gentry, Robin Holder, Manuel Hughes, Margo Humphrey, Noah Jemison, Spencer Lawrence, Richard Mayhew, Otto Neals, Rudzani Nemasetoni, Laurie Ourlicht, Aminah Robinson, Juan Sanchez, Vincent Smith, Tesfaye Tessema, Luther Vann, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, Richard Yarde. Invitation card (7 x 5 in.,), glossy card stock, printed on both sides. HOLLYWOOD (CA). AIMS Instructional Media Services, Inc. Black Dimensions in American Art (Film). Los Angeles: Carnation Company, 1971. Documentary film produced in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name. Nearly 50 artists included: John T. Biggers, Lois Mailou Jones, Ademola Olugebefola, Arthur Carraway, Dan Concholar, Delilah Pierce, Royce H. Vaughn, Gregory Ridley Jr., James Watkins, Charles White, Aaron Douglas, John Outterbridge, Arthur Rose, David Hammons, Charles Alexander Young, Jimmie Mosely, Jack Jordan, Mary Reed Daniel, James Parks, Calvin Bailey, Calvin Burnett, Garrett Whyte, Henri Linton, Vincent D. Smith, John Riddle, William Pajaud, Barbara Jones [Jones-Hogu], Arthur Britt, Nancy Rowland, Jewell Simon, Juette Johnson Day, Lemuel M. Joyner, Richard Hunt, Eugenia Dunn, Alonzo Davis, Marion Epting, Marion Sampler, Wilbur Haynie [as Haney], Bernie Casey, Leo Twiggs, Phillip Hampton, John Wilson, Alma Thomas, Russell Gordon, David Driskell, Lucille Roberts [Malkia Roberts]. 16mm. film (one reel). sd. approx. 11 min. INNIS, DORIS FUNNYE and JULIANA WU. Profiles in Black: Biographical Sketches of 100 Living Black Unsung Heroes. New York: CORE, 1976. Biographical sketches with photos of each. Artists included: Margaret Burroughs, Vincent Smith, Faith Ringgold. JAMAICA (NY). Jamaica Arts Center. Masters and Pupils: The Education of the Black Artist in New York: 1900-1980. December 13, 1986-February 28, 1987. Recto: Color poster, exhibition announcement and list of artists; verso: exhib. brochure. (8 pp.) text, 8 b&w illus. Foreword by William P. Miller, Jr.; important text by Kellie Jones, synopsizing the 'artists' history' of studio education, passed from artist to artist. Discussion of the educational role of the National Academy of Design, Cooper Union, the Harlem Art Center, Art Students League, City College, and other educational venues. Artists include: Charles Abramson, Charles Alston, Candida Alvarez, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn, Elizabeth Catlett, Ernest Crichlow, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Rex Goreleigh, William H. Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Joe Lewis, Norman Lewis, Hughie Lee-Smith, Whitfield Lovell, Tyrone Mitchell, Sana Musasama, Faith Ringgold, Augusta Savage, Vincent Smith, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Randy Williams, William T. Williams, Hale Woodruff and important white instructors such as Charles Hawthorne, Robert Gwathmey, Carl Holty, George Negroponte, Winold Reiss, Vaclav Vytlacil, and others. [Traveled to: Metropolitan Life Gallery, NY, March 10-April 24, 1987.] Single folded sheet poster-catalogue, printed on both sides. JAMAICA (NY). Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. Abstract Expressionism: The Missing Link. 1988. Included: Vincent D. Smith. A film/video was also made as a record of the exhibition. [Review: John Loughery, "The Missing Link," New Art Examiner 16 (May 1989):54-55. Cites numerous black artists who worked within the framework of Abstract Expressionism, but who were omitted from the exhibition.] JAMAICA (NY). Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. Art Against Apartheid. 1990. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith. LAGOS (Nigeria). National Museum and Theatre Gallery. Second World Black and African Festival of Art and Culture [FESTAC 77]. January 15-February 12, 1977. 64 pp. exhib. cat. Group exhibition. American participants included: Adger Cowans, Tyrone Mitchell, Gordon Parks, Noah Purifoy, Faith Ringgold, Haywood "Bill" Rivers, Charles Searles, Vincent Smith, William T. Williams, Melvyn Ettrick (representing Jamaica). Also included: Dudley Charles (Guyana), Gizaw Tadesse, Mesfin Tadesse, Cherenet Tassew, and thousands of other participants. [Reviews: African Arts Vol. 11, Issue 1 (October 1977); Black Scholar 9, 1 (September, 1977):34-37; and a recent evaluation by Denis Ekpo, "Culture and Modernity Since Expo '77," in Afropolis: City/Media/Art:149-157.] LEWIS, SAMELLA. African American Art & Artists. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990. 302 pp., 204 illus., many in color, substantial bibliog. A history of African American art from the seventeenth-century to the '90s. Revised and updated from Lewis's original publication Art: African American (1978). [See also entry on expanded edition, 2003]. Foreword by Floyd Coleman. Artists include: the slaves of Thomas Fleet, Boston,.Scipio Moorhead, Neptune Thurston, G.W.Hobbs (white artist), Joshua Johnston, Julien Hudson, Robert M. Douglass, Jr., Patrick Henry Reason, David Bustill Bowser, William Simpson, Robert S. Duncanson, Eugene Warburg, Edward Mitchell Bannister, Grafton Tyler Brown, Nelson A. Primus, Charles Ethan Porter, (Mary) Edmonia Lewis, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Meta Vaux Warrick (Fuller), William Edouard Scott, Laura Wheeler Waring, Aaron Douglas, Hale Woodruff, Palmer Hayden, Archibald Motley, Jr., Malvin Gray Johnson, Ellis Wilson, Sargent Claude Johnson, Augusta Savage, Richmond Barthé, William H. Johnson, James Lesesne Wells, Beauford Delaney, Selma Burke, Lois Mailou Jones, Alma Thomas, James A. Porter, William E. Artis, William Edmondson, Horace Pippin, Clementine Hunter, David Butler, Charles Alston, Norman Lewis, Romare Bearden, Hughie Lee-Smith, Eldzier Cortor, Jacob Lawrence, Charles White, Elizabeth Catlett, John Wilson, John Biggers, Ademola Olugebefola, Herman Kofi Bailey, Raymond Saunders, Lucille Malkia Roberts, David Driskell, Floyd Coleman, Paul Keene, Arthur Carraway, Mikelle Fletcher, Varnette Honeywood, Phoebe Beasley, Benny Andrews, Reginald Gammon, Faith Ringgold, Cliff Joseph, David Bradford, Bertrand Phillips, Manuel Hughes, Phillip Lindsay Mason, Dana Chandler, Malaika Favorite, Bob Thompson, Emilio Cruz, Leslie Price, Irene Clark, Al Hollingsworth, William Pajaud, Richard Mayhew, Bernie Casey, Floyd Newsum, Frank Williams, Louis Delsarte, William Henderson, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Joe Overstreet, Adrienne W. Hoard, Sam Gilliam, Mahler Ryder, Oliver Jackson, Eugene Coles, Vincent Smith, Calvin Jones, Pheoris West, Noah Purifoy, Ed Bereal, Betye Saar, Ron Griffin, John Outterbridge, Marie Johnson, Ibibio Fundi, John Stevens, Juan Logan, John Riddle, Richard Hunt, Mel Edwards, Allie Anderson, Ed Love, Plla Mills, Doyle Foreman, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Artis Lane, John Scott, William Anderson, Martin Puryear, Thomas Miller, Fred Eversley, Larry Urbina, Ben Hazard, Sargent Johnson, Doyle Lane, Willis (Bing) Davis, Curtis Tucker, Yvonne Tucker, Bill Maxwell, Camille Billops, James Tatum, Douglas Phillips, Art Smith, Bob Jefferson, Evangeline Montgomery, Manuel Gomez, Joanna Lee, Allen Fannin, Leo Twiggs, James Tanner, Therman Statom, Marion Sampler, Arthur Monroe, James Lawrence, Marvin Harden, Raymond Lark, Murray DePillars, Donald Coles, Joseph Geran, Ron Adams, Kenneth Falana, Ruth Waddy, Van Slater, Joyce Wellman, William E. Smith, Leon Hicks, Marion Epting, Russell Gordon, Stephanie Pogue, Devoice Berry, Margo Humphrey, Howard Smith, Jeff Donaldson, Lev Mills, Carol Ward, David Hammons, Michael Kelly Williams, Laurie Ourlicht, Gary Bibbs, Houston Conwill, Mildred Howard, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Alison Saar, Lorenzo Pace. 4to (28 cm.), wraps. 2nd edition (Revised). Reprinted 1994. LEWIS, SAMELLA. Art: African American. Los Angeles: Hancraft, 1990. x (ii), 298 pp., 294 illus. (104 in color), bibliog. Excellent survey of African American art as of the mid-70s, with a discriminating selection of plates. Unfortunately very poor quality reproductions. [All 169 artists are cross-referenced, although not separately listed here.) 4to, wraps. Second revised ed. 1990 LITTLE ROCK (AR). Gallery 1, University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Twentieth century African American art from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Walker. November 10-December 13, 1996. 39 pp. exhib. cat., color illus. Intro. by David C. Driskell; epilogue by Kevin Cole. Includes: Charles Alston, Romare Bearden, Bob Blackburn, Nanette Carter, William Carter, Kevin Cole, Robert Colescott, Allan R. Crite, Sam Gilliam, John Wesley Hardrick, Margo Humphrey, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Al Loving, William E. Smith, Vincent Smith, Larry Walker, William T. Williams, John Wilson. 4to, wraps. LOGAN, FERN, MARGARET R. VENDRYES and DEBORAH WILLIS. The Artist Portrait Series: Images of Contemporary African American Artists. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2001. xviii, 122 pp., 61 b&w illus., index. Foreword by Margaret Rose Vendryes; intro. by Deborah Willis. Portrait images by photographer Fern Logan. Subjects include: Candida Alvarez, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Vivian Browne, Selma Burke, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Adger Cowans, Ernest Crichlow, Roy DeCarava, Louis Delsarte, Joseph Delaney, Melvin Edwards, Herbert Gentry, Rosa Guy, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Lois Mailou Jones, Gwendolyn Knight (as Gwendolyn Lawrence), Jacob Lawrence, Samella Lewis, James Little, Al Loving, Fern Logan, Andrew Lyght, Richard Mayhew, Arthur Mitchell, Tyrone Mitchell, Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe, Gordon Parks, Howardena Pindell, John Pinderhughes, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Coreen Simpson, Merton Simpson, Charles Smalls, Vincent Smith, Frank Stewart, Raymond Bo Walker, Jack Whitten, William T. Williams, Mel Wright, and others. 4to (27 cm.; 10 x 8 in.), cloth, d.j. First ed. LONG, RICHARD, et al. African American Works on Paper from the Cochran Collection. Lagrange, 1991. 74 pp., 47 full-page illus. (6 in color), biogs. of 64 artists in this substantial collection. Intro. by Richard Long; texts by Judith Wilson, Camille Billops, Robert Blackburn. Includes 66 major 20th-century artists (including 16 women artists and a few less well-known artists): Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Trena Banks, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Betty Blayton, Moe Brooker, Vivian Browne, Beverly Buchanan, Selma Burke, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Ed Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, John Dowell, Allan Edmunds, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Herbert Gentry, Sam Gilliam, Maren Hassinger, Manuel Hughes, Richard Hunt, Wilmer Jennings, Lois Mailou Jones, Mohammad Khalil, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, James Little, Whitfield Lovell, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Norma Morgan, Frank Neal, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Joe Overstreet, Howardena Pindell, Stephanie Pogue, Richard Powell, Mavis Pusey, Faith Ringgold, Aminah Robinson, Betye Saar, Al Smith, Walter Agustus Simon, Morgan Smith, Marvin Smith, Vincent Smith, Luther Stovall, Alma Thomas, Mildred Thompson, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Hartwell Yeargans. [16+ venue touring exhibition beginning at: Lamar Dodd Art Center, LaGrange College, La Grange, GA, March 3-31, 1991; Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, SC; Lauren Rogers Museum, Laurel, MI; Hickory Museum of Art, Hickory, NC; Museum of the South, Mobile, AL; Museum of Arts and Sciences, Macon, GA; Greenville Museum of Art, Greenville, SC; Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History, Danville, VA; Gadsden Museum of Art, Gadsden, AL; Polk Museum of Art, Lakeland, FL; Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, SC; Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland, OH; York County Museum of Art, Rock Hill, SC; Pensacola Museum of Art, Pensacola, FL; Marietta-Cobb Museum of Art, Marietta, GA; Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN; Miami Univeristy Museum of Art, Oxford, OH; Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA; Jacksonville Museum of Art, Jacksonville, FL; William and Mary College, Williamsburg, VA; Northwest Visual Arts Center, Panama City, FL; Gertrude Herbert Institute, Augusta, GA; Springfield Art Museum, Springfield, MO; Beach Museum of Art, Manhattan, KS; Montgomery Museum of Art, Montgomery, AL; New Visions Gallery, Atlanta, GA.] 4to (28 x 22 cm.), wraps. First ed. LORETTO (PA). Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art. The 80s: A Post Pop Generation. 1990. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. LOS ANGELES (CA). California African American Museum (as Museum of Afro-American History and Culture). East/West Contemporary American Art. July 22, 1984-January 15, 1985. Unpag. exhib. cat., illus., biogs., exhib. checklist, bibliog. Text by Sharon F. Patton. 28 artists included: Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud. Houston Conwill, Alonzo Davis, David Driskell, Mel Edwards, Frederick Eversley, Sam Gilliam, Maren Hassinger, Richard Hunt, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Marie Johnson-Calloway, Jacob Lawrence, Alvin Loving, Keith Morrison, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, John Outterbridge, Howardena Pindell, Martin Puryear, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Carroll Simms, Vincent Smith, James Tanner, William T. Williams, and John Wilson. 4to, pictorial wraps. First ed. MARK, PETER A. African influences in contemporary black American painting. 1981. In: Art Voices (New York), January-February 1981:15-19, illus. Includes discussion of four painters: Dana Chandler, Lois Mailou Jones, Vincent Smith, Edgar H. Sorrells-Adewale. MARY S. SWEENEY and WILMOT T. BARTLE, eds. American Art in the Newark Museum: Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture. 1981. 431 pp., 451 b&w, 44 color illus. Catalogue listing includes: Uthman Abdur-Rahman [Harold W. Taylor], Edward M. Bannister, Romare Bearden, Barbara Chase-Riboud, William Edmondson, Minnie Evans, Joshua Johnson (as Johnston), Larry Lebby, William Majors, Joe Overstreet, Robert Reid, George Smith, Vincent Smith, Henry O. Tanner, Charles White, Hale Woodruff. 4to (11.2 x 9.2 in.), blue cloth, d.j. First ed. MIAMI (FL). Florida International University, North Miami Campus. Contemporary Black Art: A Selected Sampling. September 23-October 2, 1977. Unpag. exhib. cat., illus. 34 artists included: Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Romare Bearden, Ed Clark, Art Coppedge, Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam, Barkley Hendricks, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Jacob Lawrence, Al Loving, Robert McKnight, Tyrone Mitchell, Earl Miller, Mavis Pusey, Faith Ringgold, Bill Rivers, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, John Andrew Smith, Vincent Smith, Lou Stovall, Alma Thomas, Phyllis Thompson, Luther Vann, Paul Waters, Pheoris West, Charles White, Franklin White, William A. White, Walter Williams, Roland Woods, Purvis Young. [Traveled to Florida International Univ. Tamiami Campus, October 4-22, 1977.] 4to, wraps. First ed. MINNEAPOLIS (MN). Walker Art Center. Beat Culture and the New America, 1950-1965. 1995. Exhib. cat., illus. Group exhibition. Included: Arthur Monroe, Vincent Smith, et al. [Traveled to: M.H. de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA.) NASHVILLE (TN). Fisk University Art Gallery. The Afro-American Collection, Fisk University. 1976. 64 pp. exhib. cat., illus., brief biogs., checklist of works by 63 artists in the Fisk University Collection as of 1976. Pref. by Robert L. Hall; text by David C. Driskell. Artists include: Skunder Boghossian, Ellen Bond, Jacqueline Bontemps, Michael Borders, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Samuel Countee, Ralph Arnold, William Artis, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, G. Caliman Coxe, Allan Crite, Dante (Donald Graham), Jeff Donaldson, Lilian Dorsey, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, David Driskell, Elton Fax, Wilhelmina Godfrey [as Godfrey Wilhelmina], Clementine Hunter, Louise Jefferson, Adrienne Jenkins, Wilmer Jennings, Palmer Hayden, Earl J. Hooks, Manuel Hughes, Ben Jones, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Ben Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Sam Middleton, James Miles, Keith Morrison, Roderick Owens, James Phillips, Stephanie Pogue, James Porter, Martin Puryear, Gregory Ridley, Leo Robinson, William E. Scott, John Scott, Albert A. Smith, Vincent Smith, David Stephens, Nelson Stevens, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Bill Traylor, Alma Thomas, Mildred Thompson, James Wells, Charles White, Benjamin Wigfall, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, Viola Wood, Hale Woodruff and Charles Young. 4to (28 cm.), wraps. NASHVILLE (TN). Fisk University, Department of Art. Amistad II: Afro-American Art. 1975. 92 pp. exhib. cat., 74 b&w illus., checklist of 79 works by 53 African American artists. Text by David C. Driskell, self-interview by Allan M. Gordon, text on Amistad incident by Grant Spradling. Artists include: Benny Andrews, William Artis, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Betty Blayton, Michael Borders, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Henry O. Tanner, Claude Clark, Sr., Claude Lockhart Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Bing Davis, Philip Randolph Dotson, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, David Driskell, William Edmondson, Palmer Hayden, Earl Hooks, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnson, Lawrence Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Ted Jones, David McDonald, Sam Middleton, Keith Morrison, Archibald Motley, James Porter, Gregory Ridley, Raymond Saunders, Charles Sebree, Albert Alexander Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Bill Taylor, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilson, and others. 4to (29 cm.), wraps. First ed. NEW LONDON (CT). Lyman Allyn Art Museum, Connecticut College. So We To: Contemporary African American Printmakers. February, 1989. Group exhibition. Curated by Janet Shafner. Included: Herbert Gentry, Ray Grist, Robin Holder, James Montford, Vincent D. Smith, et al. NEW ORLEANS (LA). Amistad Research Center and the New Orleans Museum of Art. Beyond the Blues: Reflections of Africa America in the Fine Arts Collection of the Amistad Research Center. April 11-July 11, 2010. 188 pp., 316 illus. (302 in color). This publication serves both as a catalogue of the exhibition and also as documentation of the majority of works in the Amistad's collection. Foreword by David C. Driskell; texts by curator Margaret Rose Vendryes, Lowery Stokes Sims, Michael D. Harris, and Renee Ater. See exhibition checklist: http://www.amistadresearchcenter.org/beyond_the_blues/works.html. 4to, boards. Ed. of 1000. NEW ORLEANS (LA). Stella Jones Gallery. Ebony soliloquy: a five year retrospective (1996-2001). 2001. 47 pp. exhib. cat., illus. (mostly color.) Preface by Samella Lewis. Group exhibition. Included: Richard Barthé, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Herbert Gentry, Loïs Mailou Jones, Phoebe Beasley, Yvonne Edwards-Tucker, Artis Lane, Evangeline "EJ" Montgomery, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Ann Tanksley, Louis Delsarte, Malaika Favorite, Randall Henry, Dennis Paul Williams, Tayo Adenaike, El Anatsui, Antonio Carreño, LeRoy Clarke, Edouard Duval-Carrié, Wosene Kosrof, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Ernest Crichlow, Reginald Gammon, Richard Hunt, Samella Lewis, Richard Mayhew, William "Bill" Pajaud, Jr., Gordon Parks, Sr., Ron Adams, Benny Andrews, Allan Rohan Crite, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Francisco Mora, James Amos Porter, Vincent Smith. 4to (28 cm.), wraps. NEW YORK (NY).. The New York Public Library African American Desk Reference. Wiley, 1999. Includes a short and dated list of the usual 110+ artists, with a considerable New York bias, and a random handful of Haitian artists, reflecting the collection at the Schomburg: architect Julian Francis Abele. Josephine Baker, Edward M. Bannister, Amiri Baraka, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Betty Blayton, Frank Bowling, Grafton Tyler Brown, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, David Butler, Elizabeth Catlett, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Edward Clark, Robert Colescott, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, William Dawson, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, John Dowell, Robert S. Duncanson, John Dunkley, William Edmondson, Melvin Edwards, Minnie Evans, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Sam Gilliam, Henry Gudgell, David Hammons, James Hampton, William A. Harper, Bessie Harvey, Isaac Hathaway, Albert Huie, Eugene Hyde, Jean-Baptiste Jean, Florian Jenkins, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Lois Mailou Jones, Lou Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Ronald Joseph, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Georges Liautaud, Seresier Louisjuste, Richard Mayhew, Jean Metellus, Oscar Micheaux, David Miller, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald J. Motley, Abdias do Nascimento, Philomé Obin, Joe Overstreet, Gordon Parks, David Philpot, Elijah Pierce, Howardena Pindell, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, David Pottinger, Harriet Powers, Martin Puryear, Gregory D. Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Sultan Rogers, Leon Rucker, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, William Edouard Scott, Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembene, Ntozake Shange, Philip Simmons, Lorna Simpson, Moneta J. Sleet, Vincent D. Smith, Micius Stéphane, Renée Stout, SUN RA, Alma Thomas, Neptune Thurston, Mose Tolliver (as Moses), Bill Traylor, Gerard Valcin, James Vanderzee, Melvin Van Peebles. Derek Walcott, Kara Walker, Eugene Warburg, Laura Wheeler Waring, James W. Washington, Barrington Watson, Carrie Mae Weems, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Lester Willis, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde. 8vo (9.1 x 7.5 in.), cloth, d.j. NEW YORK (NY). Acts of Art. Group exhibition. Thru July 18, 1972. Included: Art Coppedge, James Denmark, Earlene Eason, Alma Gunter, Nigel Jackson, Dindga McCannon, Don Miller, Ademola Olugebefola, Enid Richardson, John Robinson, Vincent D. Smith, Ann Tanksley, Lloyd Toone, Frank Wimberley. NEW YORK (NY). Acts of Art, Inc. Black Artists in the New York Scene. n.d. (1974). Exhibition flier, illus., statement by Nigel Jackson. Includes 22 artists: Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Art Coppedge, James Denmark, Alvin Hollingsworth, Manuel Hughes, Norman Lewis, Tyrone Mitchell, Dindga McCannon, Otto Neals, Enid Richardson, Gregory Ridley, Jr., Faith Ringgold, Donald J. Robertson, Ernestine Robertson, Virginia Smit, Vincent D. Smith, Lloyd Toone, Grace Y. Williams, Hale Woodruff. Folded sheet. NEW YORK (NY). Acts of Art, Inc. The Collection. September 19-October 20, 1975. Group exhibition of work by 23 artists. Included: Allen Blisch, Kay Brown, Gil Edwards, Nigel Jackson, Philip Martin, Ademola Olugebefola, Enid Richardson, Faith Ringgold, Robert Robinson, Ed Salter, Philippe G. Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Robert Threadgill, Lloyd Toone, Frank Wimberley, et al. Folding card NEW YORK (NY). Alexandre Gallery. Selected Works by Gallery Artists. April 30-August 31, 2009. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith's "Easter Sunday" 1965. NEW YORK (NY). Alexandre Gallery. Selected Works by Gallery Artists. June 1-August 20, 2008. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith's "Saturday Night in Harlem" 1955. NEW YORK (NY). Alexandre Gallery. Selected Works by Gallery Artists. June 1-August 20, 2007. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith's "Street Scene" (from Saturday Night in Harlem series) 1952. NEW YORK (NY). Alexandre Gallery. Works by Gallery Artists and American Modernists. March 31-May 31, 2011. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith's "The Soul Brothers" c.1969. NEW YORK (NY). American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Exhibition of Contemporary Painting & Sculpture. 1968. Invitational exhibition of work by newly elected members and recipients of honors and awards. Includes Vincent D. Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Associated American Artists. Music, Music, Music. 1979. Included: Vincent D. Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Babcock Galleries. The Artist as Native: Reinventing Regionalism. October 30-November 27, 1993. Group exhibition. Included; Jonathan Green and Vincent D. Smith. [Traveled to: Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT; Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany, NY; Owensboro Museum of Fine Art, Owensboro, KY; Westmoreland Museum of Art, Greensburg, PA; Maryland Institute and College of Art, Baltimore, MD.] Announcement card. NEW YORK (NY). Bellevue Hospital Center Atrium. Images of Color 2008 - New York. February 19-March 6, 2008. An Exhibition in Celebration of Black History Month. Works from the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation's Art Collection. Included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Ramona Candy, Stephanie Chisholm, Eva Cockroft, Eldzier Cortor, Masha Froliak, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, D. Lammie-Hanson, Alex Harsley, William Howard, Richard Hunt, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Otto Neals, Ademola Olugebefola, Valerie Phillips, Gina Samson, Alfred J. Smith, Vincent Smith, James VanDerZee, Charles White, Emmett Wigglesworth, John Wilson, and Wendy Wilson. NEW YORK (NY). Black Enterprise. Group Show: A Look at Different Artists, Their Works, Styles and Techniques. 1975. In: Black Enterprise 6 (Dec. 1975): (51-62). Article consists of one paragraph on each artist, with accompanying color plate. Includes: Art Coppedge, Valerie Maynard, Alma Thomas, Barkley Hendricks, Charles White, Camille Billops, Ed Clark, Vincent Smith, Norman Lewis, Betye Saar, Benny Andrews, Fred Eversley. NEW YORK (NY). College Art Association. Directory of People of Color in the Visual Arts. 1993. Foreword, Murry DePillars; essay by Faith Ringgold. Individuals are indexed by name (with address, phone number, fax, etc.) as well as by discipline: academic, arts organization, self-employed /unaffiliated, museum/gallery; by ethnicity; and by state. Limited attempt to put together a Who's Who of Color in the Arts, based on the membership list of an organization with only 80 African American members at the time of publication. Wraps. NEW YORK (NY). Community Museum. The New Muse. 1971. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. NEW YORK (NY). G.R. N'Namdi Gallery. Robert Colescott and Vincent Smith. June 17-July 31, 2005. Two-person exhibition. NEW YORK (NY). G.W. Einstein Co., Inc. New Work. October 5-November 9, 1991. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Harlem Cultural Council. The Art of the American Negro. 1966. Group exhibition curated by Romare Bearden. Included: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Betty Blayton, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Richard Nugent, Simon B. Outlaw, Faith Ringgold, Vincent D. Smith, Charles White, et al. NEW YORK (NY). Hudson Guild Gallery. Art in Black and White. October 21-November 24, 1986. Group exhibition. Included: Robert Blackburn, Eldzier Cortor, Art Coppedge, Philip Martin, Mavis Pusey, Vincent D. Smith, Hartwell Yeargans. NEW YORK (NY). International Print Center. Creative Space: Fifty Years of Robert Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop. November 27, 2002-January 29, 2003. 14 pp. exhib. programme and checklist, color illus. A Library of Congress exhibition realized in collaboration with International Print Center New York and the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts. prints drawn from the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop Archives and Collection, now on deposit at The Library of Congress. Curated by Deborah Cullen. African American artists included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Diogenes Ballester, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Bob Blackburn, Roy DeCarava, Elizabeth Catlett, Ernest Crichlow, Eldzier Cortor, Melvin Edwards, Robin Holder, Margo Humphrey, Ronald Joseph, Mohammed Khalil, Jacob Lawrence, Rudzani Nemasetoni, Faith Ringgold, Juan Sanchez, Vincent Smith, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff. 8vo, pictorial wraps. NEW YORK (NY). Jewish Museum. Bridges and Boundaries: African Americans and American Jews. March 22-July 19, 1992. Exhib. cat. Included: Don Camp, Clarissa T. Sligh (installation), Vincent Smith, Pat Ward Williams, et al. [Traveled to: (October 13 - December 20, 1992); The Strong Museum, Rochester, NY (January 14-March 14,1993); The Jewish Historical Society of Maryland, Baltimore, MD (April 18-June 10, 1993); National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center, Wilberforce, OH (July 11-September 1, 1993); California Afro-American Museum, Los Angeles, CA (September 27-December 6, 1993); Afro-American Historical and Cultural Museum and National Museum of American Jewish History, Philadelphia, PA (January 7-March 13, 1994); Chicago Historical Society, Chicago, IL (April 7-July 4, 1994). [Reviews: David Rosen "Bridges and Boundaries.., " Museum Anthropology Vol. 16, No. 3 (October 1992):62-68; Giles R. Wright, "Bridges and Boundaries...," Journal of American History Vol. 82, No. 1 (June 1995):148-153, 3 b&w photos.] NEW YORK (NY). Kenkeleba House. Jus' Jass: Correlations of Painting and Afro-American Classical Music. October 28-December 4, 1983. Unpag. (30 pp.) exhib. cat., b&w illus. Text by Steve Cannon. Group exhibition of 27 works. Included: Terry Adkins, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Betty Blayton, Marion Brown, Vivian Browne, Ben Caldwell, Catti, David Hammons, Gerald Jackson, Noah Jemison, Daniel L. Johnson, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Joe Overstreet, James Phillips, Faith Ringgold, Charles Searles, Vincent D. Smith, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, et al. Sq. 8vo (21 x 23 cm.; 8 x 9 in.), wraps. Checklist laid in. NEW YORK (NY). Kenkeleba House. Slave Routes: The Long Memory. September, 1999. Group exhibition. Curated by Corinne Jennings. Included: Frank Bowling, Emilio Cruz, Lorenzo Pace, Howardena Pindell, Debra Priestly, Helen Ramsaran, Kaneem Smith, Vincent Smith, et al. NEW YORK (NY). Kennedy Galleries. Artists Salute Skowhegan. December 8-21, 1977. Unpag. (105 pp.), 87 b&w illus., exhib. checklist. Included are some of the well-known student and faculty alumni/ae of the renowned Skowhegan summer art program. Five African American painters including David C. Driskell, Jacob Lawrence, Sam Gilliam, Vincent D. Smith, William T. Williams. Pref. Louise Nevelson; text by Allen Ellenzweig. Sq. 8vo, wraps. First ed. NEW YORK (NY). Larcada Gallery. American and Soviet Printmakers. 1967. Group exhibition. Includes Vincent D. Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Louis Abrons Arts Center, Henry Street Settlement. Double Muse and Other Sources of Inspiration. 1993. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Michael Rosenfeld Gallery. Embracing the Muse: Africa and African American Art. January 15-March 6, 2004. 100 pp., 56 color plates, notes, bibliog. Text by Nnamdi Elleh. Includes African tribal art juxtaposed with African American artists: Charles Alston, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Melvin Edwards, Herbert Gentry, Sargent Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Betye Saar, Vincent Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Bob Thompson, Charles White and Hale Woodruff. [This substantial essay by Elleh is reprinted without illustrations in Resource Library: http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/5aa/5aa207.htm.] 4to (26 cm.), brown leatherette covers, card slipcase. First ed. of 1500. NEW YORK (NY). Museum of Modern Art. Committed to Print: Social and Political Themes in Recent American Printed Art. January 31-April 19, 1988. Exhib. cat., illus. Curated by Deborah Wye. Group exhibition of work by 121 artists. Included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Black Emergency Cultural Coalition, Vivian E. Browne, Elizabeth Catlett, Melvin Edwards, David Hammons, Jacob Lawrence, Sabra Moore, Adrian Piper, Faith Ringgold, K.O.S., Vincent Smith. NEW YORK (NY). National Academy of Design. 149th Annual Exhibition. February 23-March 16, 1974. Exhib. cat. Group exhibition. Included: Benny Andrews, Avel DeKnight, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Richard Mayhew, Vincent Smith (prize), Henry Ossawa Tanner. 12mo, stapled blue wraps. NEW YORK (NY). National Academy of Design. 150th Annual Exhibition: Oils, Sculpture, Graphics, Watercolors. February 22-March 15, 1975. 92 + [24] pp. exhib. cat., 24 b&w illus., checklist of 343 works, with index of exhibitors, list of prizewinners, directory of Academicians and Associates and list of all past members. Foreword by Academy President Alfred Easton Poor. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith. 12mo, wraps. NEW YORK (NY). New York Cultural Center. Blacks: USA: 1973. September 26-November 15, 1973. 28 pp. exhib. cat., 20 b&w illus., checklist of approx. 100 works by 42 artists. Intro. Mario Amaya; text by artist Benny Andrews. Excellent reference to many of the leading African American artists of the '60s and early '70s. Includes work by Roland Ayers, Ellen Banks, Camille Billops, Kay Brown, Vivian Browne, Carole Byard, Art Carraway, Dana Chandler, Art Coppedge, Melvyn Ettrick, Frederick J. Eversley, Reginald Gammon, Palmer Hayden, Ben Hazard, Leon Hicks, Manuel Hughes, Suzanne Jackson, Marie Johnson-Callaway, Ben Jones, Stephanie Jones, Cliff Joseph, Robert Jerden, Kassan (a.k.a. Joseph Washington), Jacob Lawrence, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Ademola Olugebefola, James Phillips, Howardena Pindell, Leslie K. Price, Mahler Ryder, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Vincent Smith, John Steptoe, Nelson Stevens, Russel Thompson, William Travis, Charles White, Hale Woodruff. The first major exhibition of Black art chosen by an all-Black jury. 4to (11 x 8.5 in.), wraps. First ed. NEW YORK (NY). New York Public Library. Bulletin of Research in the Humanities Vol. 84, No. 2 (Summer 1981) Schomburg Center Issue. 1981. A Preliminary Catalogue of the Art and Artifacts collection of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Mentions the following artists: Charles Alston, Pastor Argudin y Pedroso, Bannister, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, William Braxton, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ernest Crichlow, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Melvin Edwards, William Farrow, Elton Fax, Meta Fuller, Rex Goreleigh, Palmer Hayden, Richard Hunt, Malvin Gray Johnson, Lois Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Edmonia Lewis, Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe, Horace Pippin, (white South American artist) Teodoro Ramos Blanco, Earle Richardson, Faith Ringgold, Bernie Robynson, Augusta Savage, William E. Scott, Albert A. Smith, Marvin Smith, Morgan Smith, Vincent Smith, Henry O. Tanner, Laura Waring, James L. Wells, Charles White, William T. Williams. 8vo, wraps. NEW YORK (NY). Printmaking Workshop. Influences of Two Cultures: Claudio Juarez and Vincent D. Smith. 1997. Two-person exhibition of prints made at Bob Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop. NEW YORK (NY). Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Black New York Artists of the 20th Century: Selections from the Schomburg Center Collections. November 19, 1998-March 31, 1999. 96 pp. exhib. cat., 127 illus. (36 in color), bibliog. Ed. and text by curator Victor N. Smythe. Includes 125 artists: Tina Allen, Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Ellsworth Ausby, Abdullah Aziz, Xenobia Bailey, Ellen Banks, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Kabuya Bowens, William E. Braxton, Kay Brown, Selma Burke, Carole Byard, Elmer Simms Campbell, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Violet Chandler, Colin Chase, Schroeder Cherry, Ed Clark, Houston Conwill, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Emilio Cruz, Michael Cummings, Diane Davis, Lisa Corinne Davis, Francks Francois Deceus, Avel C. DeKnight, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Louis Delsarte, James Denmark, Aaron Douglas, Taiwo Duvall, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Tom Feelings, Robert T. Freeman, Herbert Gentry, Rex Goreleigh, Theodore Gunn, Inge Hardison, Oliver Harrington, Verna Hart, Palmer Hayden, Carl E. Hazlewood, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Manuel Hughes, Bill Hutson, Harlan Jackson, Laura James, Wadsworth Jarrell, Jamillah Jennings, M.L.J. Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Oliver Johnson, Gwen Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Cecil Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Richard Leonard, Norman Lewis, Bell Earl Looney, Valerie Maynard, Dindga McCannon, Sam Middleton, Onaway K. Millar, Louis E. Mimms, Tyrone Mitchell, Mark Keith Morse, George J.A. Murray, Sr., Sana Musasama, Otto Neals, Jide Ojo, Ademola Olugebefola, James Phillips, Anderson Pigatt, Robert S. Pious, Rose Piper, Georgette Seabrooke Powell, Debra Priestly, Ronald Okoe Pyatt, Abdur-Rahman, Patrick Reason, Donald A. Reid, Earle Richardson, Faith Ringgold, Winfred J. Russell, Alison Saar, Augusta Savage, Charles Searles, Charles Sebree, James Sepyo, Milton Sherrill, Danny Simmons, Deborah Singletary, Albert Alexander Smith, Mei Tei Sing-Smith, Vincent Smith, Tesfaye Tessema, Dox Thrash, Haileyesus Tilahun, Bo Walker, Arlington Weithers, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Emmett Wigglesworth, Billy Doe Williams, Grace Williams, Michael Kelly Williams, Walter H. Williams, William T. Williams, Ellis Wilison, George Wilson, Ron and Addelle Witherspoon, Hale Woodruff. as well as work by members of the collectives Spiral and Weusi and the early '70s exhibit by black women artists called Where We At, and dozens more. 4to (28 x 22 cm.), pictorial wraps. First ed. NEW YORK (NY). Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Recent Acquisitions of the Schomburg Collection. June 15-July 23, 1982. (8 pp.) exhib. brochure, Romare Bearden cover illus., brief biogs. of all artists. Group exhibition. Included: Jules Allen, Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Anthony Barboza, Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Samuel Ellis Blount, Vivian Browne, Edward Clark, Ernest Crichlow, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Tom Feelings, Herbert Genry, Adrienne Hoard, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe, Ademola Olugebefola, Robert Pious, Horace Pippin, Coreen Simpson, Vincent Smith, Frank Stewart, Bill Traylor, William T. Williams. 12mo, single tan double-folded sheet (11 x 17 in.), printed on both sides. NEW YORK (NY). Sragow Gallery. Strength in Numbers: Artists Respond to Conflict. June 3-July 31, 2008. Group exhibition of work from the 1930s-present by 24 artists protesting the use of U.S. government authority against its own citizens. Included: Calvin Burnett, Elizabeth Catlett, Linga Diko, Reginald Gammon, Jacob Lawrence, Juan Logan, Lorenzo Pace, Moira Pernambuco, Howardena Pindell, Duhirwe Rushemeza, Clarissa Sligh, Vincent Smith, John Wilson. NEW YORK (NY). Studio Museum in Harlem. Tradition and Conflict: Images of a Turbulent Decade 1963-1973. 1985. 100 pp. exhib. cat., 69 b&w illus., checklist of 151 works, bibliog. Important exhibition curated by Mary Schmidt Campbell. Includes Benny Andrews' journal/chronology of black political art activism 1963-1973, the curator's chronologies of historical and art historical events. Included: Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Malcolm Bailey, Romare Bearden, Kay Brown, Vivian Browne, Arthur Carraway, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Houston Conwill, Murry Depillars, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Calvin Douglass, Melvin Edwards, Perry Ferguson, Reginald Gammon, Sam Gilliam, Linda Goode-Bryant, Emilio Cruz, David Hammons, Palmer Hayden, Richard Hunt, Wadsworth Jarrell, Sargent Johnson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Carolyn Lawrence, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Dindga McCannon, Earl B. Miller, Tyrone Mitchell, Joe Overstreet, James Phillips, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Willi Posey, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Merton Simpson, George H. Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Hale Woodruff, Richard Yarde, James Yeargans, photographs by Robert A. Sengstacke. [Traveled to: Galleries of the Claremont Colleges, Claremont, CA; The Heckscher Museum, Huntington, NY; Museum of the Center of Afro-American Artists, Boston, MA; New York State Museum, Albany, NY; David and Alfred Smart Gallery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, AK; Tower Fine Arts Gallery, State University College, Brockport, NY.] 4to, wraps. First ed. NEW YORK (NY). Terry Dintenfass Gallery. Engaged Vision. February 2-17, 1994. Group exhibition. Included: Emma Amos, Willie Birch, Vincent D. Smith. NEW YORK (NY). Whitney Museum of American Art. Contemporary Black Artists in America. April 6-May 16, 1971. 64 pp. exhib. catalogue of 84 works by 58 artists. 48 illus., 6 in color, excellent bibliog. by Libby W. Seaberg. Text by Robert Doty. Includes: Ralph Arnold, Edward A. Ausby, Roland Ayers, Frank Bowling, James Brantley, Marvin Brown, Walter Cade III, Catti, John E. Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Walter Davis, Avel DeKinight, Murry N. DePillars, David Driskell, Frederick J. Eversley, Ernest Frazier, Russell T. Gordon, William H. Henderson, Barkley Hendricks, Alvin Hollingsworth, Manuel Hughes, Nathaniel Hunter, Jr., Lester L. Johnson, Jr., B. Nathaniel Knight, Jacob Lawrence, James Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Tom Lloyd, Alvin Loving, Phillip L. Mason, Charles W. McGee, Lloyd G. McNeill, Algernon Miller, Norma Morgan, Howardena Pindell, Stephanie Pogue, Noah Purifoy, Mavis Pusey, Robert Reid, John Rhoden, Henry Rollins, Joseph B. Ross, Jr., Mahler B. Ryder, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Charles Searles, Frank Sharpe, Thomas Sills, Vincent Smith, Evelyn P. Terry, Alma Thomas, John Torres, Charles White, Franklin A. White, Jr., Reginald Wickham, Todd Williams, Hartwell Yeargans, Elyn Zimmerman. Highly controversial exhibition from which 16 artists withdrew, including Romare Bearden, John Dowell, Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam, Richard Hunt, Daniel Johnson, Joe Overstreet, and William T. Williams. [Reviews included: John Canaday, "Black Artists on View in Two Exhibitions," NYT, April 7, 1971:52; Lawrence Alloway, "Art," The Nation 212, May 10, 1971:604-5; Grace Glueck, "Black Show Under Fire at the Whitney," NYT, January 31, 1971, D25; and Glueck's follow-up article: "15 of 75 Artists Leave as Whitney Exhibition Opens," NYT, April 6, 1971:50.] Small sq. 4to (25 cm.), cloth, d.j. First ed. NEW YORK (NY). Whitney Museum of American Art Downtown. People and Places. 1974. Included: Vincent D. Smith. NEWARK (NJ). Aljira, A Center for Contemporary Art. Art from the African Diaspora: Becoming Visible. February 12-March 13, 1988. Group exhibition in four parts. Included: Rufus Ogundele, Muraina Oyelami, Twins Seven-Seven, et al. Later parts included: Nanette Carter, Willie Cole, Janet Henry, Arturo Lindsay, Whitfield Lovell, Freddie Rodriguez, Vincent Smith, Paul Gardère, Nadine DeLawrence, Charles Searles, Louis Mims, Bisa Washington. NEWARK (NJ). Aljira, A Center for Contemporary Art. Contemporary African Art from the Collection of William Jones. February 22-March 24, 2007. Group exhibition. Included: Jacob Afolabi, El Anatsui, Frank Bowling, Jimoh Burimoh, Victor Davson, Adebisi Fabunmi, Ablade Glover. Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede, Wosene Worke Kosrof, Norman Lewis, Kerry James Marshall, Kivuthi Mbuno, Zacharia Mbutha, Francis King Msangi, Elimo Njau, Odili Donald Odita, Bayo Ogundele, Asiru Olatunde, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Folorunsho Owolabi, Muraina Oyelami, Kofi Setordji, Twins Seven-Seven, José Cláudio da Silva, Vincent Smith, Ancent Soi, Utaibi. NEWARK (NJ). Aljira, A Center for Contemporary Art. With All Deliberate Speed: Revisiting Race and Education. Thru June 28, 1996. Group exhibition. Curated by Howard McCalebb & Carl Hazlewood. Included: Lisa Corinne Davis, Ray Grist, Janet Henry, Vincent Smith, et al. [Review: Abby Goodnough, NYT, June 9, 1996.] NEWARK (NJ). Newark Museum. Black Artists: Two Generations. May 13-September 6, 1971. 36 pp. exhib. catalogue listing 115 works by 59 artists (only 10 women artists included), 58 b&w illus. plus b&w cover design by Dmitri Wright; addresses for approx. 30 artists. Text by Samuel C. Miller; poem by Paul Waters. Important record of one of the major African American exhibitions of the early 1970s. Includes: Charles Axt, Richmond Barthé, Romare Bearden, Betty Blayton, Samuel Brown, Ernest Crichlow, Norma Criss, Allan Rohan Crite, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Beauford Delaney, Aaron Douglas, William Edmondson, Barbara Fudge, John Fudge, James Green, Palmer Hayden, Eddie Holmes, Raymond Hunt, Bill Hutson, Zell Ingram, Gerald Jackson, Bob James, Florian Jenkins, Wilmer Jennings, Ben Johnson, Jeanne Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Ben Jones, Leon Jones, Robert Knight, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Edward Loper, Frank Marshall, Marietta (Betty) Mayes, Gordon Mayes, Richard Mayhew, Don Miller, Julia Miller, Joe Overstreet, Horace Pippin, Rev. Arthur Roach, Junius Redwood, Robert Reid, Haywood Bill Rivers, Bernard Séjourne, Christopher Shelton, Margaret Slade (Kelley), George Smith, Vincent Smith, Thelma Johnson Streat, Dox Thrash, Paul Waters, Charles White, John Wilson, Hale Woodruff, and Dmitiri Wright. Small 4to (26 cm.), pictorial stapled card wraps. First ed. NEWARK (NJ). Newark Museum. Realism and Abstraction. 1987. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent Smith. NEWARK (NJ). Newark Public Library. Original Prints by African American Artists. January 15-February 28, 2002. Featuring the Graphic Art of James Edward Jones and Related Works on Paper. Curated by William J. Dane. Includes: New Jersey and Newark artists Gladys Grauer, Roy Crosse, Florian Jenkins and Jacob Lawrence; as well as Romare Bearden, Sam Gilliam, Vincent D. Smith, Joan Eda Byrd, Benny Andrews and James Lesesne Wells. NEWARK (NJ). Newark Public Library. The Robert Blackburn Legacy: Printmaking Workshop at Forty-five. January 19-March 12, 1994. Exhib. cat., illus., portraits. Texts by curators William J. Dane and Deborah Cullen. Group exhibition including: Bill Hutson, Robin Holder, Rudzani Nemasetoni, Vincent Smith, et al. [Also shown at Printmaking Workshop, NY.] 8vo (20 cm.), wraps. NEWARK (NJ). Paul Robeson Center Gallery, Rutgers University and Pennsylvania State University. 20 Contemporary Printmakers. 1982. Group exhibition. Included: Vincent D. Smith, et al. PAINTER, NELL IRVIN. Creating Black Americans: African American History and its Meanings 1619 to the Present. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. xvi, 458 pp., 148 illus. (110 in color), 4 maps, bibliog., index. Valuable for its images. A historical and cultural narrative that stretches from Africa to hip-hop with unusual attention paid to visual work. However, Painter is a historian not an art historian and therefore deals with the art in summary fashion without discussion of its layered imagery. Artists named include: Sylvia Abernathy, Tina Allen, Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Xenobia Bailey, James Presley Ball, Edward M. Bannister, Amiri Baraka (as writer), Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, C. M. Battey, Romare Bearden, Arthur P. Bedou, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Carroll Parrott Blue, Leslie Bolling, Chakaia Booker, Cloyd Boykin, Kay Brown, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Chris Clark, Claude Clarke, Houston Conwill, Brett Cook-Dizney, Allan Rohan Crite, Willis "Bing" Davis, Roy DeCarava, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, David C. Driskell, Robert S. Duncanson, Melvin Edwards, Tom Feelings, Roland L. Freeman, Meta Warrick Fuller, Paul Goodnight, Robert Haggins, Ed Hamilton, David Hammons, Inge Hardison, Edwin A. Harleston, Isaac Hathaway, Palmer Hayden, Kyra Hicks, Freida High-Tesfagiogis, Paul Houzell, Julien Hudson, Margo Humphrey, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Wadsworth Jarrell, Joshua Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, William H. Johnson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Jacob Lawrence, Viola Burley Leak, Charlotte Lewis, Edmonia Lewis, Samella Lewis, Glenn Ligon, Estella Conwill Majozo, Valerie Maynard, Aaron McGruder, Lev Mills, Scipio Moorhead, Archibald Motley, Jr., Howardena Pindell, Horace Pippin, James A. Porter, Harriet Powers, Faith Ringgold, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, JoeSam, Melvin Samuels (NOC 167), O.L. Samuels, Augusta Savage, Joyce J. Scott, Herbert Singleton, Albert A. Smith, Morgan & Marvin Smith, Vincent Smith, Nelson Stevens, Ann Tanksley, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Dox Thrash, James Vanderzee, Kara Walker, Paul Wandless, Augustus Washington, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Pat Ward Williams, Hale Woodruff, Purvis Young. 8vo (9.4 x 8.2 in.), cloth, d.j. First ed. PATTON, SHARON F. African American Art. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. 319 pp., illus. throughout in color and b&w, notes, list of illus., timeline, index. Excellent new survey covering approximately 108 artists from Scipio Moorhead to Dawoud Bey, including 22 women artists: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Malcolm Bailey, James Presley Ball, Henry (Mike) Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Dutreuil Barjon, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, Peter Bentzon, Dawoud Bey, Bob Blackburn, Grafton Tyler Brown, Vivian E. Browne, Jacob (Jacoba) Bunel, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Ed Clark, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Houston Conwill, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Dave (the Potter), Thomas Day, Beauford Delaney, Jean-Louis Dolliole, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Robert M. Douglass, Robert S. Duncanson, William Edmondson, Melvin Edwards, Minnie Evans. Frederick J. Eversley, John Frances, Meta Fuller, Reginald Gammon, Herbert Gentry, Sam Gilliam, Célestin Glapion, Thomas Goss, Jr., Henry Gudgell, David Hammons, James Hampton, Maren Hassinger, Palmer Hayden, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Clifford L. Jackson, May Howard Jackson, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Oliver Jackson, Wadsworth A. Jarrell, Daniel Larue Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Ben Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Norman Lewis, Jules Lion, Tom Lloyd, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Sam Middleton, Scipio Moorhead, Keith Morrison, Archibald Motley, Ademola Olugebefola, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Rose Piper, Horace Pippin, Harriet Powers, Noah Purifoy, Martin Puryear, Patrick Reason, Faith Ringgold, Jean Rousseau, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, Addison Scurlock, Lorna Simpson, Merton D. Simpson, Vincent D. Smith, Thelma Streat, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Alma Thomas, Bob Thompson, Dox Thrash, James Vanderzee, Christian Walker, William W. Walker, Eugene Warburg, Charles White, Pat Ward Williams, Walter J. Williams, Hale Woodruff. 4to, cloth, d.j. First ed PHILADELPHIA (PA). Brandywine Workshop. Selections from the Brandywine Workshop Collection. 2001. Group exhibition of prints made at Brandywine Workshop. Included: Vincent Smith, et al. [Traveled to: Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, NJ.] PHILADELPHIA (PA). Philadelphia Museum of Art. Full Spectrum: Prints from the Brandywine Workshop. September 7-November 25, 2012. 80 pp. exhib. cat., color illus. Curated from the Museum's collection by Shelley R. Langdale. Text by Ruth Fine and Shelley Langdale. The exhibition included 54 prints whose subject ranged from cultural identity, political and social issues to portraiture, landscape, patterning, and pure abstraction. Note: The catalogue extends the scope of the exhibition to include a total of 100 prints by 89 artists (the majority are African American artists), donated by the Brandywine Workshop to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Artists included: Danny Alvarez, Emma Amos, Akili Ron Anderson, Benny Andrews, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, James Brantley, Moe Brooker, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Nanette Clark, Louis Delsarte, John Dowell, James Dupree, Alan Edmunds, Rodney Ewing, Sam Gilliam, Michael D. Harris, Barkeley Hendricks, Curlee Holton, Ed Hughes, Richard Hunt, Wadsworth Jarrell, Martina Johnson-Allen, Paul Keene, Hughie Lee-Smith, Samella Lewis, Alvin Loving, Valerie Maynard, Ibrahim Miranda, Evangeline Montgomery, Keith Morrison, Howardena Pindell, Dwight Pogue, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Clarissa Sligh, Vincent Smith, Edgar Sorrells-Adewale, Vuyile Voyiya, Larry Walker, James Lesesne Wells, William T. Williams. 4to (27.9 x 21.6 cm.), wraps. PHOENIX (AZ). Phoenix Art Museum. Four Corners States Biennial Exhibition: Art Voices/South Vol. 4. Art Voices Publishing Co., 1981. Exhib. cat., illus., notes. Includes: Romare Bearden, Vincent Smith, Dana Chandler (whose statement about black art in the 70's could not be more lucid: "We were not searching for our identity because we knew who we were. We were searching for how best to express that identity and what form it was going to take." (p.18). PINE BLUFF (AR). Southeast Arkansas Arts and Science Center. Selections from the John M. Howard Memorial Collection of African-American Art. 1991. Exhib. cat., checklist. Text by Garland F. Jenkens. includes unknown Africobra [as AfraCobra] artist, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Bernard W. Brooks III, Vivian Browne, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Arthur Coppedge, Tarrance Corbin, Eldzier Cortor, J. Brooks Dendy III, Palmer Hayden, Leon N. Hicks, Manuel Hughes [as Manual], Rosalind Jeffries, Jacob Lawrence, Samella Lewis, Juan Logan, John Nichols, James D. Parks, Vincent Smith, Nelson Stevens, John Wilson, Henry Wolf, Rip Woods. PLOSKI, HARRY A. and ERNEST KAISER, eds. AFRO USA: A Reference Wok on the Black Experience. New York: Bellwether Co., 1971. [x], 1110 pp., 14 b&w illus. of art and visual artists, bibliog., index. Massive encyclopedic reference work with small section (pp. 702-723) devoted to visual art. Includes entries on Charles Alston, Robert Bannister, Richmond Barthe, Romare Bearden, John Biggers, William Carter, Dana Chandler, Ernest Crichlow, Aaron Douglas, Robert Duncanson, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Alice Gafford, Sam Gilliam, Rose Green, David Hammons, William Harper, Isaac Hathaway, Hector Hill, Richard Hunt, May Howard Jackson, Jack Jordan, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee Smith, Edmonia Lewis, Geraldine McCullough, Earl Miller, P'lla Mills, Joseph Overstreet, Horace Pippin, Augusta Savage, Vincent Smith, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Bob Thompson, Laura Wheeler Waring, Charles White, Jack Whitten, Beulah Woodard, and Hale Woodruff. The list of "Other Noted Negro Painters and Sculptors" includes: Benny Andrews, William E. Artis, Henry W. Bannarn, Eloise Bishop, Betty Blayton, Selma H. Burke, E. Simms Campbell, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Charles C. Dawson, Avel DeKnight, Joseph Delaney, William McKnight Farrow, Fred C. Flemister, Allan R. Freelon, Reginald Gammon, William Giles (?), Rex Gorleigh, Stephen Greene (white artist?), Edward A. Harleston, Palmer Hayden, Felrath Hines, Al Hollingsworth, Sargent C. Johnson, William H. Johnson, Ben Jones, Henry B. Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Larry Lewis, Norman Lewis, Tom Lloyd, Edward L. Loper, Leon Meeks, Archibald Motley, Marion Perkins, James A. Porter, Elizabeth Prophet, William Edouard Scott, Charles Sebree, Thelma Johnson Streat, James L. Wells, Jack White and John Wilson. Scipio Moorhead and Malcolm Bailey mentioned in passing. Large stout 4to, cloth. (First revised enlarged edition. (Previously pub. as Negro Almanac). PLOSKI, HARRY A., ed. The Negro Almanac: A Reference Work on the Afro-American. New York: A Wiley-Interscience Publication, 1983. 1550 pp. Includes essay on The Black Artist. Gylbert Coker cited as art consultant. Many misspellings. Artists mentioned include: Scipio Moorhead, James Porter, Eugene Warburg, Robert Duncanson, William H. Simpson, Edward M. Bannister, Joshua Johnston, Robert Douglass, David Bowser, Edmonia Lewis, Henry O. Tanner, William Harper, Dorothy Fannin, Meta Fuller, Archibald Motley, Palmer Hayden. Malvin Gray Johnson, Laura Waring, William E. Scott, Hughie Lee-Smith, Zell Ingram, Charles Sallee, Elmer Brown, William E. Smith, George Hulsinger, James Herring, Aaron Douglas, Augusta Savage, Charles Alston, Hale Woodruff, Charles White, Richmond Barthé, Malvin Gray Johnson, Henry Bannarn, Florence Purviance, Dox Thrash, Robert Blackburn, James Denmark, Dindga McCannon, Frank Wimberly, Ann Tanksley, Don Robertson, Lloyd Toones, Lois Jones, Jo Butler, Robert Threadgill, Faith Ringgold, Romare Bearden, Ernest Crichlow, Norman Lewis, Jimmy Mosley, Samella Lewis, F. L. Spellmon, Phillip Hampton, Venola Seals Jennings, Juanita Moulon, Eugene Jesse Brown, Hayward Oubré, Ademola Olugebefola, Otto Neals, Kay Brown, Jean Taylor, Genesis II, David Hammons, Senga Nengudi, Randy Williams, Howardena Pindell, Edward Spriggs, Beauford Delaney, James Vanderzee, Melvin Edwards, Vincent Smith, Alonzo Davis, Dale Davis, Margaret Burroughs, Elizabeth Catlett, Gordon Parks, Rex Goreleigh, William McBride, Jr., Eldzier Cortor, James Gittens, Joan Maynard. Kynaston McShine, Coker, Cheryl McClenney, Faith Weaver, Randy Williams, Florence Hardney, Dolores Wright, Cathy Chance, Lowery Sims, Richard Hunt, Roland Ayers, Frank Bowling, Marvin Brown, Walter Cade, Catti, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Manuel Hughes, Barkley Hendricks, Juan Logan, Alvin Loving, Tom Lloyd, Lloyd McNeill, Algernon Miller, Norma Morgan, Mavis Pusey, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, Thomas Sills, Thelma Johnson Streat, Alma Thomas, John Torres, Todd Williams, Mahler Ryder, Minnie Evans, Jacob Lawrence, Haywood Rivers, Edward Clark, Camille Billops, Joe Overstreet, Louise Parks, Herbert Gentry, William Edmondson, James Parks, Marion Perkins, Bernard Goss, Reginald Gammon, Emma Amos, Charles Alston, Richard Mayhew, Al Hollingsworth, Calvin Douglass, Merton Simpson, Earl Miller, Felrath Hines, Perry Ferguson, William Majors, James Yeargans. Ruth Waddy; Evangeline Montgomery, Jeff Donaldson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Gerald Williams, Carolyn Lawrence, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Frank Smith, Howard Mallory, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Nelson Stevens, Vivian Browne, Kay Brown, William Harper, Isaac Hathaway, Julien Hudson, May Howard Jackson, Edmonia Lewis, Patrick Reason, William Simpson, A. B. Wilson, William Braxton, Allan Crite, Alice Gafford, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, William Artis, John Biggers, William Carter, Joseph Delaney, Elton Fax, Frederick Flemister, Ronald Joseph, Horace Pippin, Charles Sebree, Bill Traylor, Ellis Wilson, John Wilson, Starmanda Bullock, Dana Chandler, Raven Chanticleer, Roy DeCarava, John Dowell, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, Daniel Johnson, Geraldine McCullough, Earl Miller, Clarence Morgan, Norma Morgan, Skunder Boghossian, Bob Thompson, Clifton Webb, Jack Whitten. 4to, cloth. 4th ed. PRIGOFF, JAMES and ROBIN J. DUNITZ. Walls of Heritage, Walls of Pride: African American Murals. San Francisco: Pomegranate Communications, 2003. 242 pp., approx. 225 color plates throughout, notes, bibliog., artist biogs., index. Texts by Floyd Coleman and Michael D. Harris. Covers the African American mural movement from the 1967 Wall of Respect (Chicago), Wall of Dignity (1968, Detroit) to the 1990s, representing over 200 urban murals from New York to Los Angeles, Milwaukee to Atlanta. (Obviously many communities' murals were omitted.) Photographers include Robert A. Sengstacke, et al. Artists include: A One, Darrell Anderson, Dietrich Adonis, Ta-Coumba Aiken, Marcus Akinlana, Charles Alston, Apex, Jean Michel Basquiat, John Biggers, Romare Bearden, Brad Bernard, John T. Biggers, Willie Birch, Blade, Betty Blayton, Edythe Boone, Michael Borders, David Bradford, Bruce Brice, Elmer Brown, Carole Byard, Carla Carr, Alvin Carter, Mitchell Caton, Dana Chandler, Edward Christmas, Chris Clark, Melvin W. Clark, Kevin Cole, Houston Conwill, Brett Cook-Dizney, Anthony Cox, Dewey S. Crumpler, Adrienne Cruz, Alonzo Davis, Charles Vincent Davis, Charles Davis, Senay Dennis, Justine Devan, Therman Dillard, Jeff Donaldson, Aaron Douglas, Robert Duncanson, Sharon Dunn, Eugene Eda, Eddie Edwards, Melvin Edwards, John Feagin, John Fisher, Leroy Foster, Walker Foster, Franco [Franklin Gaskin], Charles Freeman, Robert Gayton, Stephanie George, Jimmie James Greene, Paul Goodnight, Bernard Goss, Edwin A. Harleston, Michael D. Harris, Vertis Hayes, Jessie Holliman, Nathan Hoskins, John W. Howard, Jean Paul Hubbard, Henry Hudson, Clementine Hunter, Eliot Hunter, Arnold Hurley, Wadsworth Jarrell, Amos Johnson, Jerome Johnson, Sargent Johnson, Calvin Jones, Frederick D. Jones, Lawrence A. Jones, Seitu Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Jack Jordan, Akinsanya Kambon, Kase2, John A. Kendrick, Shyaam Khufu, Doyle Lane, Jacob Lawrence, Charlotte Lewis, Samella Lewis, Jon Onye Lockard, John Lutz, Pontella Mason, Alvin McCray, Charles W. McGee, Allie McGhee, Don McIlvaine, Willie Middlebrook, Aaron D. Miller, Don Miller, Bernice Montgomery, Archibald Motley, Noe (Melvin Henry Samuels, Jr.), Ras Ammar Nsoroma, Noni Olabisi, Maude Owens, James Padgett, Jameel Parker, Vera Parks, James Pate, Alice Patrick, James Phillips, Howardena Pindell, Elliott Pinkney, Arleen Polite, Georgette Powell, Refa (Senay Dennis), Toby Richards, Earle Richardson, Gary Rickson, John Riddle, John A. Robinson (same as John N.), Sano I (Ayumi Chisolm), John T. Scott, William Edouard Scott, Charles Searles, Isaka Shamsud-Din, Mel Simmons, John Sims, Kiela Songhay Smith, Vincent Smith, Nina Smoot-Cain, Spon, Charles Stallings, A. G. Joe Stephenson, Nelson Stevens, Roderick Sykes, Dorian Sylvain, Spencer Taylor, Richard C. Thomas, Louis Vaughn, Vulcan, William (Bill) Walker, WANE, Horace Washington, Richard Watson, C. Siddha Sila Webber, Charles White, Ian White, Bernard Williams, Caleb Williams, Keith Williams, William T. Williams, Hale Woodruff, John Yancey, Terrance Yancey, Bernard Young, et al. (Originally exhibited at the University Art Gallery, California State University, Dominguez Hills, CA, the exhibition as presented in the CAC Gallery, Cambridge City Hall Annex, Cambridge, MA included several Boston muralists not in the original exhibition: Dana Chandler, Paul Goodnight, Jameel Parker, and Gary Rickson.]. Oblong 4to (9.3 x 12.25 in.), cloth, d.j. with CD-ROM. Enlarged edition. PURCHASE (NY). Neuberger Museum of Art, SUNY-Purchase. Jazz in Situ [Cover title: Jazz Club]. January 25-April 26, 1998. 24 pp., 18 illus. (8 in color), checklist of 64 works by nine artists, biogs., exhibs., commissions, colls. for each artist. Exhibition of jazz images in all media. Text by Judy Collischan. Six African American artists included: Frederick James Brown, Noah Jemison, Renny Molenaar, Lorenzo Pace, and Vincent Smith. 4to (11 x 8.5 in.), pictorial stapled card wraps. First ed. RIGGS, THOMAS, ed. St. James Guide to Black Artists. Detroit: St. James Press, 1997. xxiv, 625 pp., illus. A highly selective reference work listing only approximately 400 artists of African descent worldwide (including around 300 African American artists, approximately 20% women artists.) Illus. of work or photos of many artists, brief descriptive texts by well-known scholars, with selected list of exhibitions for each, plus many artists' statements. A noticeable absence of many artists under 45, most photographers, and many women artists. Far fewer artists listed here than in Igoe, Cederholm, or other sources. Stout 4to (29 cm.), laminated yellow papered boards. First ed. ROCHESTER (MI). Oakland University Art Gallery. Seminal Works from the N'Namdi Collection of African American Art. September 13-October 12, 2008. 100 pp., 42 color illus. Pref. by George N'Namdi; text by exhibition curator Dick Goody; artist entries by Monica Bowman. Includes: Charles H. Alston, Afro-Brazilian artist Emanoel Araujo, Romare Bearden, Chakaia Booker, Frank Bowling, Carol Ann Carter, Nanette Carter, Ed Clark, Robert Colescott, Beauford Delaney, Herbert Gentry, Sam Gilliam, David Hammons, Richard Hunt, Bill Hutson, Rashid Johnson, Phyllis Dianne Jones, Artis Lane, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Al Loving, Richard Mayhew, Charles McGee, Allie McGhee, Tyrone Mitchell, Vicente Pimentel, Howardena Pindell, Betye Saar, Raymond Saunders, John T. Scott, Charles Searles, Vincent Smith, Bob Thompson, Jack Whitten, Bernard Williams, William T. Williams. 4to (30 cm.), wraps. SARATOGA (NY). Hall of Springs, Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Museum and State Education Department, Albany NY. Fifteen Under Forty: Paintings by Young New York State Black Artists. July 1-July 31, 1970. Unpag. (40 pp.) exhib. cat., illus. Exhibition held at Saratoga Performing Arts Center. Director of the exhibition: Ernest Crichlow; consultant: Romare Bearden. Biographical materials and information compiled and written by Romare Bearden. Included: Emma Amos, Ellsworth Ausby, Betty Blayton, Calvin Douglass, Raymond Saunders, Vincent D. Smith, Benjamin Wigfall, et al. 4to (25 cm.), wraps. SCHENECTADY (NY). Schenectady Museum of Art. Afro-American Impressions of Africa. January 20-February 9, 1984. 20 pp., 22 b&w illus., biogs. Intro. by Grace Green. Included Juanita Ballinger, Linda Chalmers, Robin Chandler, Benigh Enous, Karen Eutemey, Joseph Gilmore, Valeriejo Harris, Barry Irving, Jamillah Jennings, Nita June de Jong, Bryan McFarlane, Otto Neals, Cherry Schroeder, Carole Shannon, Vincent Smith, Rex Stewart, Red Swan, Jr., Jack White, Emerson E. Williams and Herb Williams. [Also exhibited at Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY.] 8vo (9 x 7 in.), wraps. First ed. SHERMAN, SUSAN and GALE JACKSON, eds. Art Against Apartheid: Works for Freedom. New York: Ikon, 1986. 182 pp. Intro by Alice Walker. A special double issue of IKON (second series, #s 5-6). Includes: Candida Alvarez, Tom Feelings, Vincent D. Smith. 8vo, wraps. SMITH, VINCENT (interviewee). A Painter Looks Back. 1980. In: National Scene Magazine [New York] 11 (November 1980):12-13. Mentions numerous other artists: Dave Brown, Virginia Cox, Harvey Cropper, Joseph Ducayet, Beauford Delaney, Tommy Ellis, Tom Feelings, Edgar Fitt, George Ford, Jimmy Gittens, Selvin Goldbourne, Arthur Hardie [as Hardy], Al Hicks, Cliff Jackson, Ted Joans, Jacob Lawrence, Philip Martin, Richard Mayhew, Samuel Middleton, Earl Miller, Arthur Monroe, Jack Morton, James A. Porter, Karl Parbosingh, Charles White, Walter Williams. SOUTH BEND (IN). Snite Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Works on Paper by African American Artists. January 14-February 25, 2007. Group exhibition. Included: Richard Hunt, Debra Muirhead, Martin Puryear, Faith Ringgold, Lorna Simpson, and Vincent Smith. ST LOUIS (MO). St. Louis Public Library. An index to Black American artists. St. Louis: St. Louis Public Library, 1972. 50 pp. Also includes art historians such as Henri Ghent. In this database, only artists are cross-referenced. 4to (28 cm.) SYRACUSE (NY). Community Folk Art Gallery, Syracuse University. Passages and Icons: Vincent D. Smith and Ademola Olugebefola. 1989. Two-person exhibition. THOMISON, DENNIS. The Black Artist in America: An Index to Reproductions. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1991. Includes: index to Black artists, bibliography (including doctoral dissertations and audiovisual materials.) Many of the dozens of spelling errors and incomplete names have been corrected in this entry and names of known white artists omitted from our entry, but errors may still exist in this entry, so beware: Jesse Aaron, Charles Abramson, Maria Adair, Lauren Adam, Ovid P. Adams, Ron Adams, Terry Adkins, (Jonathan) Ta Coumba T. Aiken, Jacques Akins, Lawrence E. Alexander, Tina Allen, Pauline Alley-Barnes, Charles Alston, Frank Alston, Charlotte Amevor, Emma Amos (Levine), Allie Anderson, Benny Andrews, Edmund Minor Archer, Pastor Argudin y Pedroso [as Y. Pedroso Argudin], Anna Arnold, Ralph Arnold, William Artis, Kwasi Seitu Asante [as Kwai Seitu Asantey], Steve Ashby, Rose Auld, Ellsworth Ausby, Henry Avery, Charles Axt, Roland Ayers, Annabelle Bacot, Calvin Bailey, Herman Kofi Bailey, Malcolm Bailey, Annabelle Baker, E. Loretta Ballard, Jene Ballentine, Casper Banjo, Bill Banks, Ellen Banks, John W. Banks, Henry Bannarn, Edward Bannister, Curtis R. Barnes, Ernie Barnes, James MacDonald Barnsley, Richmond Barthé, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Daniel Carter Beard, Romare Bearden, Phoebe Beasley, Falcon Beazer, Arthello Beck, Sherman Beck, Cleveland Bellow, Gwendolyn Bennett, Herbert Bennett, Ed Bereal, Arthur Berry, Devoice Berry, Ben Bey, John Biggers, Camille Billops, Willie Birch, Eloise Bishop, Robert Blackburn, Tarleton Blackwell, Lamont K. Bland, Betty Blayton, Gloria Bohanon, Hawkins Bolden, Leslie Bolling, Shirley Bolton, Higgins Bond, Erma Booker, Michael Borders, Ronald Boutte, Siras Bowens, Lynn Bowers, Frank Bowling, David Bustill Bowser, David Patterson Boyd, David Bradford, Harold Bradford, Peter Bradley, Fred Bragg, Winston Branch, Brumsic Brandon, James Brantley, William Braxton, Bruce Brice, Arthur Britt, James Britton, Sylvester Britton, Moe Brooker, Bernard Brooks, Mable Brooks, Oraston Brooks-el, David Scott Brown, Elmer Brown, Fred Brown, Frederick Brown, Grafton Brown, James Andrew Brown, Joshua Brown, Kay Brown, Marvin Brown, Richard Brown, Samuel Brown, Vivian Browne, Henry Brownlee, Beverly Buchanan, Selma Burke, Arlene Burke-Morgan, Calvin Burnett, Margaret Burroughs, Cecil Burton, Charles Burwell, Nathaniel Bustion, David Butler, Carole Byard, Albert Byrd, Walter Cade, Joyce Cadoo, Bernard Cameron, Simms Campbell, Frederick Campbell, Thomas Cannon (as Canon), Nicholas Canyon, John Carlis, Arthur Carraway, Albert Carter, Allen Carter, George Carter, Grant Carter, Ivy Carter, Keithen Carter, Robert Carter, William Carter, Yvonne Carter, George Washington Carver, Bernard Casey, Yvonne Catchings, Elizabeth Catlett, Frances Catlett, Mitchell Caton, Catti, Charlotte Chambless, Dana Chandler, John Chandler, Robin Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Kitty Chavis, Edward Christmas, Petra Cintron, George Clack, Claude Clark Sr., Claude Lockhart Clark, Edward Clark, Irene Clark, LeRoy Clarke, Pauline Clay, Denise Cobb, Gylbert Coker, Marion Elizabeth Cole, Archie Coleman, Floyd Coleman, Donald Coles, Robert Colescott, Carolyn Collins, Paul Collins, Richard Collins, Samuel Collins, Don Concholar, Wallace Conway, Houston Conwill, William A. Cooper, Arthur Coppedge, Jean Cornwell, Eldzier Cortor, Samuel Countee, Harold Cousins, Cleo Crawford, Marva Cremer, Ernest Crichlow, Norma Criss, Allan Rohan Crite, Harvey Cropper, Geraldine Crossland, Rushie Croxton, Doris Crudup, Dewey Crumpler, Emilio Cruz, Charles Cullen (White artist), Vince Cullers, Michael Cummings, Urania Cummings, DeVon Cunningham, Samuel Curtis, William Curtis, Artis Dameron, Mary Reed Daniel, Aaron Darling, Alonzo Davis, Bing Davis, Charles Davis, Dale Davis, Rachel Davis, Theresa Davis, Ulysses Davis, Walter Lewis Davis, Charles C. Davis, William Dawson, Juette Day, Roy DeCarava, Avel DeKnight, Beauford Delaney, Joseph Delaney, Nadine Delawrence, Louis Delsarte, Richard Dempsey, J. Brooks Dendy, III (as Brooks Dendy), James Denmark, Murry DePillars, Joseph DeVillis, Robert D'Hue, Kenneth Dickerson, Voris Dickerson, Charles Dickson, Frank Dillon, Leo Dillon, Robert Dilworth, James Donaldson, Jeff Donaldson, Lillian Dorsey, William Dorsey, Aaron Douglas, Emory Douglas, Calvin Douglass, Glanton Dowdell, John Dowell, Sam Doyle, David Driskell, Ulric S. Dunbar, Robert Duncanson, Eugenia Dunn, John Morris Dunn, Edward Dwight, Adolphus Ealey, Lawrence Edelin, William Edmondson, Anthony Edwards, Melvin Edwards, Eugene Eda [as Edy], John Elder, Maurice Ellison, Walter Ellison, Mae Engron, Annette Easley, Marion Epting, Melvyn Ettrick (as Melvin), Clifford Eubanks, Minnie Evans, Darrell Evers, Frederick Eversley, Cyril Fabio, James Fairfax, Kenneth Falana, Josephus Farmer, John Farrar, William Farrow, Malaika Favorite, Elton Fax, Tom Feelings, Claude Ferguson, Violet Fields, Lawrence Fisher, Thomas Flanagan, Walter Flax, Frederick Flemister, Mikelle Fletcher, Curt Flood, Batunde Folayemi, George Ford, Doyle Foreman, Leroy Foster, Walker Foster, John Francis, Richard Franklin, Ernest Frazier, Allan Freelon, Gloria Freeman, Pam Friday, John Fudge, Meta Fuller, Ibibio Fundi, Ramon Gabriel, Alice Gafford, West Gale, George Gamble, Reginald Gammon, Christine Gant, Jim Gary, Adolphus Garrett, Leroy Gaskin, Lamerol A. Gatewood, Herbert Gentry, Joseph Geran, Ezekiel Gibbs, William Giles, Sam Gilliam, Robert Glover, William Golding, Paul Goodnight, Erma Gordon, L. T. Gordon, Robert Gordon, Russell Gordon, Rex Goreleigh, Bernard Goss, Joe Grant, Oscar Graves, Todd Gray, Annabelle Green, James Green, Jonathan Green, Robert Green, Donald Greene, Michael Greene, Joseph Grey, Charles Ron Griffin, Eugene Grigsby, Raymond Grist, Michael Gude, Ethel Guest, John Hailstalk, Charles Haines, Horathel Hall, Karl Hall, Wesley Hall, Edward Hamilton, Eva Hamlin-Miller, David Hammons, James Hampton, Phillip Hampton, Marvin Harden, Inge Hardison, John Hardrick, Edwin Harleston, William Harper, Hugh Harrell, Oliver Harrington, Gilbert Harris, Hollon Harris, John Harris, Scotland J. B. Harris, Warren Harris, Bessie Harvey, Maren Hassinger, Cynthia Hawkins (as Thelma), William Hawkins, Frank Hayden, Kitty Hayden, Palmer Hayden, William Hayden, Vertis Hayes, Anthony Haynes, Wilbur Haynie, Benjamin Hazard, June Hector, Dion Henderson, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, William Henderson, Barkley Hendricks, Gregory A. Henry, Robert Henry, Ernest Herbert, James Herring, Mark Hewitt, Leon Hicks, Renalda Higgins, Hector Hill, Felrath Hines, Alfred Hinton, Tim Hinton, Adrienne Hoard, Irwin Hoffman, Raymond Holbert, Geoffrey Holder, Robin Holder, Lonnie Holley, Alvin Hollingsworth, Eddie Holmes, Varnette Honeywood, Earl J. Hooks, Ray Horner, Paul Houzell, Helena Howard, Humbert Howard, John Howard, Mildred Howard, Raymond Howell, William Howell, Calvin Hubbard, Henry Hudson, Julien Hudson, James Huff, Manuel Hughes, Margo Humphrey, Raymond Hunt, Richard Hunt, Clementine Hunter, Elliott Hunter, Arnold Hurley, Bill Hutson, Zell Ingram, Sue Irons, A. B. Jackson, Gerald Jackson, Harlan Jackson, Hiram Jackson, May Jackson, Oliver Jackson, Robert Jackson, Suzanne Jackson, Walter Jackson, Martha Jackson-Jarvis, Bob James, Wadsworth Jarrell, Jasmin Joseph [as Joseph Jasmin], Archie Jefferson, Rosalind Jeffries, Noah Jemison, Barbara Fudge Jenkins, Florian Jenkins, Chester Jennings, Venola Jennings, Wilmer Jennings, Georgia Jessup, Johana, Daniel Johnson, Edith Johnson, Harvey Johnson, Herbert Johnson, Jeanne Johnson, Malvin Gray Johnson, Marie Johnson-Calloway, Milton Derr (as Milton Johnson), Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Joshua Johnston, Ben Jones, Calvin Jones, Dorcas Jones, Frank A. Jones, Frederick D. Jones, Jr. (as Frederic Jones), Henry B. Jones, Johnny Jones, Lawrence Arthur Jones, Leon Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Nathan Jones, Tonnie Jones, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Jack Jordan, Cliff Joseph, Ronald Joseph, Lemuel Joyner, Edward Judie, Michael Kabu, Arthur Kaufman, Charles Keck, Paul Keene, John Kendrick, Harriet Kennedy, Leon Kennedy, Joseph Kersey; Virginia Kiah, Henri King, James King, Gwendolyn Knight, Robert Knight, Lawrence Kolawole, Brenda Lacy, (Laura) Jean Lacy, Roy LaGrone, Artis Lane, Doyle Lane, Raymond Lark, Carolyn Lawrence, Jacob Lawrence, James Lawrence, Clarence Lawson, Louis LeBlanc, James Lee, Hughie Lee-Smith, Lizetta LeFalle-Collins, Leon Leonard, Bruce LeVert, Edmonia Lewis, Edwin E. Lewis, Flora Lewis, James E. Lewis, Norman Lewis, Roy Lewis, Samella Lewis, Elba Lightfoot, Charles Lilly [as Lily], Arturo Lindsay, Henry Linton, Jules Lion, James Little, Marcia Lloyd, Tom Lloyd, Jon Lockard, Donald Locke, Lionel Lofton, Juan Logan, Bert Long, Willie Longshore, Edward Loper, Francisco Lord, Jesse Lott, Edward Love, Nina Lovelace, Whitfield Lovell, Alvin Loving, Ramon Loy, William Luckett, John Lutz, Don McAllister, Theadius McCall, Dindga McCannon, Edward McCluney, Jesse McCowan, Sam McCrary, Geraldine McCullough, Lawrence McGaugh, Charles McGee, Donald McIlvaine, Karl McIntosh, Joseph Mack, Edward McKay, Thomas McKinney, Alexander McMath, Robert McMillon, William McNeil, Lloyd McNeill, Clarence Major, William Majors, David Mann, Ulysses Marshall, Phillip Lindsay Mason, Lester Mathews, Sharon Matthews, William (Bill) Maxwell, Gordon Mayes, Marietta Mayes, Richard Mayhew, Valerie Maynard, Victoria Meek, Leon Meeks, Yvonne Meo, Helga Meyer, Gaston Micheaux, Charles Mickens, Samuel Middleton, Onnie Millar, Aaron Miller, Algernon Miller, Don Miller, Earl Miller, Eva Hamlin Miller, Guy Miller, Julia Miller, Charles Milles, Armsted Mills, Edward Mills, Lev Mills, Priscilla Mills (P'lla), Carol Mitchell, Corinne Mitchell, Tyrone Mitchell, Arthur Monroe, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ronald Moody, Ted Moody, Frank Moore, Ron Moore, Sabra Moore, Theophilus Moore, William Moore, Leedell Moorehead, Scipio Moorhead, Clarence Morgan, Norma Morgan, Sister Gertrude Morgan, Patricia Morris, Keith Morrison, Lee Jack Morton, Jimmie Mosely, David Mosley, Lottie Moss, Archibald Motley, Hugh Mulzac, Betty Murchison, J. B. Murry, Teixera Nash, Inez Nathaniel, Frank Neal, George Neal, Jerome Neal, Robert Neal, Otto Neals, Robert Newsome, James Newton, Rochelle Nicholas, John Nichols, Isaac Nommo, Oliver Nowlin, Trudell Obey, Constance Okwumabua, Osira Olatunde, Kermit Oliver, Yaounde Olu, Ademola Olugebefola, Mary O'Neal, Haywood Oubré, Simon Outlaw, John Outterbridge, Joseph Overstreet, Carl Owens, Winnie Owens-Hart, Lorenzo Pace, William Pajaud, Denise Palm, James Pappas, Christopher Parks, James Parks, Louise Parks, Vera Parks, Oliver Parson, James Pate, Edgar Patience, John Payne, Leslie Payne, Sandra Peck, Alberto Pena, Angela Perkins, Marion Perkins, Michael Perry, Bertrand Phillips, Charles James Phillips, Harper Phillips, Ted Phillips, Delilah Pierce, Elijah Pierce, Harold Pierce, Anderson Pigatt, Stanley Pinckney, Howardena Pindell, Elliott Pinkney, Jerry Pinkney, Robert Pious, Adrian Piper, Horace Pippin, Betty Pitts, Stephanie Pogue, Naomi Polk, Charles Porter, James Porter, Georgette Powell, Judson Powell, Richard Powell, Daniel Pressley, Leslie Price, Ramon Price, Nelson Primus, Arnold Prince, E. (Evelyn?) Proctor, Nancy Prophet, Ronnie Prosser, William Pryor, Noah Purifoy, Florence Purviance, Martin Puryear, Mavis Pusey, Teodoro Ramos Blanco y Penita, Helen Ramsaran, Joseph Randolph; Thomas Range, Frank Rawlings, Jennifer Ray, Maxine Raysor, Patrick Reason, Roscoe Reddix, Junius Redwood, James Reed, Jerry Reed, Donald Reid, O. Richard Reid, Robert Reid, Leon Renfro, John Rhoden, Ben Richardson, Earle Richardson, Enid Richardson, Gary Rickson, John Riddle, Gregory Ridley, Faith Ringgold, Haywood Rivers, Arthur Roach, Malkia Roberts, Royal Robertson, Aminah Robinson, Charles Robinson, John N. Robinson, Peter L. Robinson, Brenda Rogers, Charles Rogers, Herbert Rogers, Juanita Rogers, Sultan Rogers, Bernard Rollins, Henry Rollins, Arthur Rose, Charles Ross, James Ross, Nellie Mae Rowe, Sandra Rowe, Nancy Rowland, Winfred Russsell, Mahler Ryder, Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Charles Sallee, JoeSam., Marion Sampler, Bert Samples, Juan Sanchez, Eve Sandler, Walter Sanford, Floyd Sapp, Raymond Saunders, Augusta Savage, Ann Sawyer, Sydney Schenck, Vivian Schuyler Key, John Scott (Johnny) , John Tarrell Scott, Joyce Scott, William Scott, Charles Searles, Charles Sebree, Bernard Sepyo, Bennie Settles, Franklin Shands, Frank Sharpe, Christopher Shelton, Milton Sherrill, Thomas Sills, Gloria Simmons, Carroll Simms, Jewell Simon, Walter Simon, Coreen Simpson, Ken Simpson, Merton Simpson, William Simpson, Michael Singletary (as Singletry), Nathaniel Sirles, Margaret Slade (Kelley), Van Slater, Louis Sloan, Albert A. Smith, Alfred J. Smith, Alvin Smith, Arenzo Smith, Damballah Dolphus Smith, Floyd Smith, Frank Smith, George Smith, Howard Smith, John Henry Smith, Marvin Smith, Mary T. Smith, Sue Jane Smith, Vincent Smith, William Smith, Zenobia Smith, Rufus Snoddy, Sylvia Snowden, Carroll Sockwell, Ben Solowey, Edgar Sorrells, Georgia Speller, Henry Speller, Shirley Stark, David Stephens, Lewis Stephens, Walter Stephens, Erik Stephenson, Nelson Stevens, Mary Stewart, Renée Stout, Edith Strange, Thelma Streat, Richard Stroud, Dennis Stroy, Charles Suggs, Sharon Sulton, Johnnie Swearingen, Earle Sweeting, Roderick Sykes, Clarence Talley, Ann Tanksley, Henry O. Tanner, James Tanner, Ralph Tate, Carlton Taylor, Cecil Taylor, Janet Taylor Pickett, Lawrence Taylor, William (Bill) Taylor, Herbert Temple, Emerson Terry, Evelyn Terry, Freida Tesfagiorgis, Alma Thomas, Charles Thomas, James "Son Ford" Thomas, Larry Erskine Thomas, Matthew Thomas, Roy Thomas, William Thomas (a.k.a. Juba Solo), Conrad Thompson, Lovett Thompson, Mildred Thompson, Phyllis Thompson, Bob Thompson, Russ Thompson, Dox Thrash, Mose Tolliver, William Tolliver, Lloyd Toone, John Torres, Elaine Towns, Bill Traylor, Charles Tucker, Clive Tucker, Yvonne Edwards Tucker, Charlene Tull, Donald Turner, Leo Twiggs, Alfred Tyler, Anna Tyler, Barbara Tyson Mosley, Bernard Upshur, Jon Urquhart, Florestee Vance, Ernest Varner, Royce Vaughn, George Victory, Harry Vital, Ruth Waddy, Annie Walker, Charles Walker, Clinton Walker, Earl Walker, Lawrence Walker, Raymond Walker [a.k.a. Bo Walker], William Walker, Bobby Walls, Daniel Warburg, Eugene Warburg, Denise Ward-Brown, Evelyn Ware, Laura Waring, Masood Ali Warren, Horace Washington, James Washington, Mary Washington, Timothy Washington, Richard Waters, James Watkins, Curtis Watson, Howard Watson, Willard Watson, Richard Waytt, Claude Weaver, Stephanie Weaver, Clifton Webb, Derek Webster, Edward Webster, Albert Wells, James Wells, Roland Welton, Barbara Wesson, Pheoris West, Lamonte Westmoreland, Charles White, Cynthia White, Franklin White, George White, J. Philip White, Jack White (sculptor), Jack White (painter), John Whitmore, Jack Whitten, Garrett Whyte, Benjamin Wigfall, Bertie Wiggs, Deborah Wilkins, Timothy Wilkins, Billy Dee Williams, Chester Williams, Douglas Williams, Frank Williams, George Williams, Gerald Williams, Jerome Williams, Jose Williams, Laura Williams, Matthew Williams, Michael K. Williams, Pat Ward Williams, Randy Williams, Roy Lee Williams, Todd Williams, Walter Williams, William T. Williams, Yvonne Williams, Philemona Williamson, Stan Williamson, Luster Willis, A. B. Wilson, Edward Wilson, Ellis Wilson, Fred Wilson, George Wilson, Henry Wilson, John Wilson, Stanley C. Wilson, Linda Windle, Eugene Winslow, Vernon Winslow, Cedric Winters, Viola Wood, Hale Woodruff, Roosevelt Woods, Shirley Woodson, Beulah Woodard, Bernard Wright, Dmitri Wright, Estella Viola Wright, George Wright, Richard Wyatt, Frank Wyley, Richard Yarde, James Yeargans, Joseph Yoakum, Bernard Young, Charles Young, Clarence Young, Kenneth Young, Milton Young. TOKYO (Japan). Terada Warehouse Exhibition Hall/International Cultural Exchange Association, Shintomi, Chuo-Ku. The Art of Black America in Japan: Afro-American Modernism, 1937-1993. September 17-27, 1987. Exhib. cat., illus. Curated by David Driskell. Included: Romare Bearden, John Biggers, Ed Clark, Tom Feelings, Margo Humphrey, Bill Hutson, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Al Loving, Keith Morrison, Howardena Pindell, Stephanie Pogue, Faith Ringgold, Vincent Smith, Sylvia Snowden, Pheoris West, Charles White, Stanley Whitney, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, Richard Yarde. [Traveled to Chiba, Japan October 5-15, 1987.] WALLACE, MICHELE. Invisibility Blues, From Pop to Theory. New York: Verso, 1990. 267 pp., index. Important critical essays in black feminist cultural criticism. Numerous artists, filmmakers, politicians, musicians and issues in historical and contemporary culture from the civil rights movement to the end of the 80s. Artists mentioned include: Benny Andrews, Malcolm C. W. Bailey, Josephine Baker, Amiri Baraka, Romare Bearden, Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Elizabeth Catlett, Dana Chandler, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Melvin Edwards, David Hammons, Richard Hunt, Daniel L. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones, Issac Julien, K.O.S., Jacob Lawrence, Howardena Pindell, Faith Ringgold, Betye Saar, Vincent Smith, Carrie Mae Weems. 4to, black cloth, lettered in silver, dust jacket. First ed. WASHINGTON (DC). Parish Gallery. HERBERT GENTRY and Friends. July 18-September 14, 2008. Group exhibition. Included: Mohammed Ahmed Abdalla, Skunder Boghossian, Romare Bearden, Nanette Carter, Ed Clark, Beauford Delaney, Herbert Gentry, Robin Holder, Bill Hutson, Lois Mailou Jones, Wifredo Lam, Richard Mayhew, Sam Middleton, Toni Parks, Vicente Pimentel, Larry Potter, Rachelle Puryear, Vincent D. Smith and Walter Williams. WASHINGTON (DC). Smith-Mason Gallery of Art, in cooperation with the National Bank of Washington. National Exhibition of Black Artists. October 10-November 30, 1971. 20 pp. exhib. cat., illus. Group exhibition. Included: William E. Artis, Charles Axt, Francis Baird, Bill Banks, Ellen Banks, Mohammed S. Bey, Antonio M. Blackburn, Shirley L. Bolton, Arthur L. Britt, Benjamin Britt, Malcolm Brown, Calvin Burnett, Elwyn Bush, Yvonne Carter, Dana Chandler, Wallace X. Conway, Art Coppedge, Eldzier Cortor, G. Caliman Coxe, Philip A. Coxe, Randall Craig, Rachel Davis, Robert Freeman, Reginald Gammon, Jim Gary, Leroy Gaskin, Patricia Giles, Rex Goreleigh, Eugene Grigsby, Phillip Hampton, Reba D. Hill, Alvin C. Hollingsworth, Humbert Howard, Nathaniel Hunter, Alice E.W. Ivory, Catherine James, Venda Jennings, Lester L. Johnson, Ben Jones, Lois Mailou Jones, Jack Jordan, Charles E. Joyner, Harriet Kennedy, Raymond Lark, Yvonne Lawson, Juan Logan, Edward L. Loper, Sr., Edward L. Loper, Jr., Ed Love, Hedrick E. Marshall, Corinne Mitchell, Evelyn Mitchell, Hedrick E. Mitchell, Lorraine S. Montgomery, Frederick A. Morris, Keith Morrison, Jimmie Mosely, Barbara J. Peterson, Delilah W. Pierce, Betty J. Pitts, James A. Porter, Georgette Powell, Roscoe C. Reddix, William H. Richardson, Catherine B. Richmond, Percy Ricks, Gregory Ridley, Lucille Roberts, Donald J. Robertson, Peter L. Robinson, Jr., Arthur Roland, Jr., Arthur Rose, Frank Sharp, Kenn Simpson, Michael Singletary, Vincent D. Smith, Zenobia Smith, Dale Spann, Edith G. Strange, Larry J. Strickland, Bill Taylor, Elmer D. Taylor, Jean Taylor, Conrad Thompson, Leo Twiggs, Jean Valentine, Larry Walker, Rena Watson (as Renee), Evelyn Ware, James Lesesne Wells, Pheoris West, Garrett Whyte, Louis Williams, George L. Wilson, Daniel R. Wynn, Charles (Chuck) Young. 4to (31 x 12 cm.), wraps. WEST NYACK (NY). Rockland Center for the Arts. African-American Printmaking, 1838 to the Present. October 8-November 19, 1995. 26 pp. exhib. cat., 9 b&w illus., brief but substantial biogs. of each artist, full exhib. checklist. Text by Harry Henderson. Group exhibition. Co-curated by Cynthia Hawkins and Lena Hyun. Included 74 works by 46 artists: Benny Andrews, Romare Bearden, John T. Biggers, Camille Billops, Bob Blackburn, Marvin Brown, Vivian E. Browne, Selma Burke, Margaret Burroughs, Nanette Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Allan Rohan Crite, Melvin Edwards, Elton Fax, Allan R. Freelon, Robin Holder, Margo Humphrey, Wilmer Jennings, Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Ronald Joseph, Mohammad Omer Khalil, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, Alvin D. Loving, William Majors, Richard Mayhew, Stephanie Pogue, Patrick Reason, Faith Ringgold, Aminah Brenda L. Robinson, Albert A. Smith, Vincent D. Smith, Raymond Steth, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Mildred Thompson, Dox Thrash, James Lesesne Wells, Charles White, Michael Kelly Williams, William T. Williams, John Wilson, and Hale Woodruff. Oblong 8vo, stapled pictorial wraps. First ed. YONKERS (NY). Temple Emanu-El. Festival of Arts. 1965. Group exhibition of Spiral members and others: Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, Vivian E. Browne, Ernest Crichlow, Fred Eure, Inge Hardison, Alvin Hollingsworth, Jacob Lawrence, Hughie Lee-Smith, Norman Lewis, William Majors, Bruce Nugent, Billie Pickard-Pritchard, Arnold Prince, Vincent Smith, Bob Thompson, Jack Whitten, Hale Woodruff. [Courtesy Emma Amos.] Vincent DaCosta Smith (December 12, 1929 – December 27, 2003) was an American artist, painter, printmaker and teacher. He was known for his depictions of black life. Contents 1 Early life 2 Art education 3 Career 4 Death and legacy 5 Exhibitions 6 Awards and honors 7 Works 7.1 Murals 8 Publications 8.1 Print portfolios 8.2 Book illustrations 9 References 10 External links Early life Vincent DaCosta Smith was born on December 12, 1929, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant[1] neighborhood of Brooklyn, to Beresford Leopole Smith and Louise Etheline Todd. Both were immigrants from Barbados.[2] He was raised in Brownsville, Brooklyn and Smith drew what he saw around him.[citation needed] He attended an integrated school where he studied piano and the alto sax. worked a range of jobs before he became a full-time artist. At 16, he worked for the Lackawanna Railroad repairing tracks. At 17, Smith enlisted in the army and traveled with his brigade for a year.[3] It wasn't until after his time in the army that Smith began to paint and printmaking.[4] At the age of 22, Smith was working in a post office where he grew to be friends with fellow artist Tom Boutis.[1] Art education Tom Boutis took Smith to a Paul Cézanne show at the Museum of Modern Art in 1951. After seeing the Cézanne show, Smith resigned from his position at the post office and began reading extensively about art. He studied at the Art Students League of New York with Reginald Marsh.[citation needed] Later, he began to sit in on classes at the Brooklyn Museum Art School, where the instructors would let him join in on the lessons and the criticisms.[3] After attending classes at the Brooklyn Museum Art School and the Art Students League of New York, he was accepted and received a scholarship to the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine,[4] where he studied from 1953 to 1956. Beginning in 1954,[5] he started taking official classes at the Brooklyn Museum Art School, and studied painting, etching, and woodblock printmaking.[4] Career Smith was a figurative painter who used abstractions and materiality to make something new.[6] Smith's work depicts the rhythms and intricacies of black life through his prints and paintings.[7] Many of his paintings and prints rely heavily on patterns.[6] According to Ronald Smothers, Vincent D. Smith's work "stood as an expressionistic bridge between the stark figures of Jacob Lawrence and the Cubist and Abstract strains represented by black artists like Romare Bearden and Norman Lewis."[7] Smith has described his own work as "a marriage between Africa and the West."[3] Over his life, he worked in both painting and printmaking. In 1959, Smith won the John Hay Whitney Fellowship which allowed him to travel to the Caribbean for a year.[8] During this year he was deeply inspired by the customs and lifestyle of the native people.[8] Throughout his life, Smith attended various art schools but it was not until turning 50 he returned to college to earn an official degree.[7] From 1967 until 1976 he taught at the Whitney Museum’s Art Resource Center.[2] Later in 1985, he taught printmaking at the Center for Art and Culture of Bedford Stuyvesant. Death and legacy Smith died in Manhattan on the December 27, 2003 from lymphoma and related complications.[7] Smith was aged 74.[7] His work is included in many public museum collections including Art Institute of Chicago,[9] Newark Museum of Art,[1] Museum of Modern Art (MoMA),[1] Metropolitan Museum of Art,[1] Yale University Art Gallery,[10] Davidson Art Center,[11] Fitzwilliam Museum,[12] Brooklyn Museum,[13] Albright-Knox Art Gallery,[14] Rhode Island School of Design Museum,[15] among others. Exhibitions Over the course of his career, he had over 25 one-man shows and had his work shown in over 30 group shows.[7] Vincent D. Smith had shown in a range of galleries and museums over his life-span. In 1970, he had his first individual exhibition at the Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. His first retrospective was in 1989 at the Schenectady Museum in Schenectady, New York.[2] Solo shows: 1974 - The Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine[2] 1974 - Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, New York[2] 1989 - Schenectady Museum (Retrospective 1964-1989), Schenectady, New York Awards and honors This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) 1959 – John Hay Whitney Fellowship, John Hay Whitney Foundation, New York City, New York[8] 1967 – Artist in Residence, Smithsonian Conference Center 1968 – Grant, The American Academy and National Institute of Arts and Letters, New York 1971 – Creative Public Service Award for the Cultural Council Foundation, New York 1973 – National Endowment of the Arts and Humanities Travel Grant, New York 1973-1974 – Childe Hassam Purchase Award, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York City, New York 1974 – Thomas P. Clarke Prize, National Academy of Design, New York 1981 – Windsor and Newton Award, National Society of Painters in Casein and Acrylic , New York. 1985-1986 – Artist-in-Residence, Kenkeleba House Gallery, New York. Works Below are some selected works: Study for Mural at Boys and Girls High School, 1972, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York A Moment Supreme, 1972, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York The Triumph of B.L.S., 1973, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Jonkonnu Festival, 1996, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Murals Mural for Crotona/Tremont Social Service Center, The Human Resource Administration, New York, New York 1980[1] Mural for Oberia D. Dempsey Multi-Service Center of Central Harlem, New York, New York 1989[1]
  • Condition: Good
  • Book Title: vincent smith pamphlet
  • Topic: Artists
  • Author: David Smith
  • Publication Year: 1970
  • Language: English

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