<\/figure>\r\nOne of the world\u2019s most important self-taught artists, Louisiana artist Clementine Hunter is known for her paintings which reflected her daily life. A prolific artist, she taught herself how to paint in her mid fifties and created 5,000 artworks during her lifetime. Hunter painted her daily life\u2019s memories on plates, discarded fabric, old bottles, cardboard scraps, and even brown paper bags.\u00a0Her works told the story of early 20th century black life working and living on a plantation. The scenes she painted included church services, working picking cotton and pecans, washing clothes, funerals and baptisms. Hunter also created quilts and tapestries before she started painting.<\/p>\r\n
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In 1955, Hunter was the first African-American artist to have a solo art show at the New Orleans Museum of Art and another at Northwestern State College (now University). Though her work was exhibited at Northwestern State College, she was not allowed to attend, because she was African-American and she was not allowed into the college gallery with white patrons who came to see her exhibition. Hunter had to be snuck in the back to see her own exhibition.<\/p>\r\n
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Hunter\u2019s work has been exhibited throughout the world in many important art museums such as the\u00a0 Smithsonian Institute, the Museum of American Folk Art, the Dallas Museum of Fine Art, and the New York Historical Association. Also, her work is collected by some of the most important art collectors in the world such as Oprah Winfrey.<\/p>\r\n
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In 1986, Hunter received an honorary fine arts degree from the Northwestern State University of Louisiana in recognition of her artistic achievements. Hunter lived to be one hundred. She died in 1988.<\/p>\r\n
Follow us on Instagram <\/span>to see more works by this artist and other daily post and images.<\/strong><\/p>\r\nThese posts are sponsored by the Black Art In America Foundation<\/span><\/a> as part of our continuous advocacy for African-American art.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n <\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nBeverly Buchanan (1940-2015)<\/h2>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
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<\/figure>\r\nBeverly Buchanan (1940-2015) was an African-American artist whose art works explored the relationship between memory and vernacular architecture in Southern African American culture.\u00a0 Painting, sculpture and video was her media of choice, but she was best known for her series of sculptural assemblage shacks she saw in the rural South.\u00a0These shacks gave homage to the importance of black resilience and ingenuity in black American culture, which was a very important element that not only contributed to black people\u2019s survival in America but also the beauty of black American culture.<\/p>\r\n
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She received fellowships from The National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim and studied under the noted African-American artist\u00a0 Norman Lewis. Her works have been exhibited in various museums and galleries throughout the United States. In 2016, the year after her death, the Brooklyn Museum organized an important exhibition of her work, titled \u201cBeverly Buchanan-Ruins and Rituals.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
Follow us on Instagram <\/span>to see more works by this artist and other daily post and images.<\/strong><\/p>\r\nThese posts are sponsored by the Black Art In America Foundation<\/span><\/a> as part of our continuous advocacy for African-American art.<\/p>\r\n <\/figure>\r\nAlma Woodsey Thomas (1891-1978)<\/h2>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n