"The African American community is as complex as any other. It has no single voice, no single way of seeing the world, and no single way of producing art, music, literature or theater. My paintings explore and celebrate the beauty, elegance and grace of the black middle class through my personal experience.
Much of my work draws inspiration from my childhood spent between two cultures: the Gold Coast, West Africa (now Ghana) and the East Coast of the United States. In my exhibition, New Works, I revisited the themes of race and culture that I explored in “Black Tie” (1981), part of a series that comments on the personal conflict I felt as African-Americans settled into middle-class life following the racial tensions of the 1960s and 1970s."
This painting is a gift to BSC from the Afro-American Association 1983.
- Subject Matter: Portrait
- Created: 1983
- Inventory Number: 236743
- Current Location: Art Center
Other Work From Anderson Gallery - BSU
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