<\/a>Browse and shop for fine art from our growing network of artists, collectors, estates, galleries — specializing in works by Black American artists with great values on premier art.<\/p><\/div>\n
In your own words how would you describe your art?<\/span><\/p>\nI think my art is honest. My art is, sometimes though, a bit morbid. Because I talk about existence and I do portraits. For example, I did a big show and I had a lot of portraits. People asked, \u201cwhy do you do so many portraits?\u201d I said, \u201cI\u2019m documenting my demise, my disappearance.\u201d Nobody wants to hear that. Why are you saying that? Well why do you think I\u2019m doing self-portraits? I\u2019m looking at myself change and become something different. A lot of artists have done that. So, the purpose of the art is not always this lame conversation about I make art because I can\u2019t help myself or I make art because I really love it and I want to make some beautiful things because I\u2019m a believer that truth is beauty. Truth can be painful. But I think truth is the real beauty. A lot of art can be deception. <\/span><\/p>\nIs there a recurring theme in your work?<\/span><\/p>\nYes, there is a recurring theme or a constant theme of the human dilemma, human dynamics. I\u2019m doing a series right now called <\/span>Deluge<\/span><\/i>. And the series is about how we deal with having everything washed away. And when people look at it they say are you talking about Katrina or Sandy? I say no, I\u2019m talking about struggle. What do you grab when everything is going to be lost. When the wave is coming in and you can see it. And you\u2019re in your home, what is the thing that you grab? The only thing you can take with you. You grab your money. You grab your credit cards, you grab your photographs. What do you grab to take with you? It\u2019s an interesting thing this human dynamic.<\/span><\/p>\nWhat do you find most challenging about creating art?<\/span><\/p>\nBefore, it was probably trying to accept myself as an artist. Trying to and wanting to be accepted by those who I consider the masters. Getting my teachers and others to accept me as an artist and to say that I have a gift that was meaningful and significant enough to participate. Because you know when you go through school, and train as artists there\u2019s a lot of artists\u2026I went to a private art school, 500 students and everybody was going to be a Picasso. It was so competitive. You\u2019re looking over your shoulder. You\u2019re looking at people. And then not only do you have a range of talent, you have privilege. So here I am after the military in my twenties sitting in a classroom with 17 and 18-year-olds whose parents have paid for the whole ride and here I am struggling to pay for it with the GI Bill and working. My experience in that classroom was completely different. Becoming an artist is completely different. So of course, you begin to realize that the artworld was racist like most of the world. That you gotta negotiate a certain kind of space being identified as a black artist or self-identifying as a black artist. The amazing thing about that, this is an interesting story. When I was in Cleveland, Ohio which was almost 50% African American and had the first black mayor in the country, Carl Stokes, his brother was Lou Stokes the senator. We had the senators, mayors that were black, entrepreneurs, some of the wealthiest people in the city were of color. They had power, they had prestige, so I grew up in a community where my patrons, when I started as a young artist, was that community. So, I went to an organization. I was invited to come to an organization of predominantly white artists. I think there were 150 people in the audience there were three of us that were of color and they are talking about the entire market, how the market is, and how they can survive. And I realized that I had half of the population available to me. I had a larger studio than they had. I had more success than most of them. I left that meeting because I had a market. \u00a0They were trying to find a market.<\/span><\/p>\nCan you expand more on your education and what that was like being a black man in your twenties going to school with privileged teens?<\/span><\/p>\nI remember it took me ten years to get my first undergraduate degree. The school was just so happy that I had finally finished. And that reveals a struggle. But I had confidence that I was going to pass all of them. And I\u2019ve been more successful than 90% of the people that graduated from my class. So, maybe even more than that. I may be the most successful. I\u2019m not sure. So, you have to think about what does success mean to you? And that\u2019s one of the hardest things for artists to make a determination about. What does it mean to be a successful artist? How do you define that? Does it mean you have a show in a museum? You can have a show in a museum, but what if no museum buys your work although you have a show in a museum? Or the museum buys your work, but you get no shows at a museum? I remember there\u2019s a colleague of mine who\u2019s an artist, African American, and he just so wanted a show in New York City. I knew a gallery director in New York City and I recommended him, and I think someone else did too, not just me. He was eventually given that show in New York City for a summer show. And I remember visiting his home and on his dining room table was a framed announcement of his show. It was in the middle of the dining room table. He was so proud of this. All he wanted was to have that New York show. Well, it didn\u2019t mean anything. Nothing in the end. It just means he had a show in New York City. A lot of artists have shows in New York City. \u00a0A lot of artists are in museums. So, that can\u2019t be the thing that determines whether you are producing meaningful work. And then what are you to do if you are not seeking validation from the world around you. You have to validate yourself. So, I make work so that I can better understand my existence in the world that I am in, so I can negotiate that and also nurture and develop my own awareness and consciousness and to find a higher plane of an existence and understanding. So, my work serves a very personalized purpose more than a social purpose. I don\u2019t make things for the marketplace. Sometimes I sell things and find things in museums. But that\u2019s not my motive. I have a very private motive. <\/span><\/p>\nSo how do you measure success for yourself?<\/span><\/p>\nI think probably one of the most important aspects of success for me is what I do for my family, for my children. For example, the idea of my children and grandchildren walking into my studio and seeing a painting. They think about what Poppa thought about. My grandfather had these ideals. My grandfather thought about these things. The consciousness of my grandfather. How often do you get to see that? We have parents, grandparents. How often do we really know what they\u2019re thinking? How often do we see our mother\u2019s poetry? How often do we know about our father\u2019s dissatisfaction or longing for something else? Or existential crisis? We don\u2019t know anything about that most of the time. I discovered things about my father before his passing. He was 94. How do you get a sense of who you are? And I want my children to know who I am. My work also reveals the things that I value and the things that I want to assert and also my morality. You\u2019re asserting your morality.<\/span><\/p>\nIs there anything you would tell emerging artists to do as they try to create a career for themselves?<\/span><\/p>\nWell, first of all there\u2019s too many of them out there. I\u2019m not saying you shouldn\u2019t be artistic in life, creative in your living. But there are so many. You\u2019ve got to have noticed that yourself. What I mean by so many. So many at different levels of talent and ability and it\u2019s starting to get diluted so much. The meaning is diluted. For example, we see this now with the attention paid to African American artists. You see so much work. Just go on BAIA, shop at BAIA all those images. That\u2019s just a small sliver of what\u2019s out there. So much out there. And what do we do with all of that? What do we do with all that? It\u2019s like singers. Some people can really sing, and other people can\u2019t necessarily sing. Turn off the electronics and they sound terrible. So how do we determine where quality exists. That\u2019s the question. Quality not just competence or ability but quality. What is someone talking about that is really meaningful. Because you can be so democratic. Everybody gets in. You don\u2019t have any sense of quality. Mediocrity rules. Now this is a hard thing to do because if you set a standard and you claim that something\u2019s good or something\u2019s not so good it can be a difficult existence. And part of the role at the Driskell Center that I tried to move the center to, is being an evaluator. Say what\u2019s good, say what\u2019s not, and be able to support it. You gotta be able to say it. Nobody\u2019s saying it. Before if a museum like the Met bought your work, you assume that it had gone through a process of critical review. For them to acquire it, meant it was good. That may still exist at the Met and other museums, but it doesn\u2019t exist in the marketplace. There\u2019s no one in the marketplace that is evaluating the work. Critics don\u2019t even write criticism. They write press releases. Seldom do they critique. Sometimes they do. Every now and then you\u2019ll read a review that says an artist is not so good. <\/span><\/p>\nDo you feel it\u2019s important for you to create?<\/span><\/p>\nYeah, it\u2019s important for me to create because I\u2019m trying to have a discussion. And sometimes I have images that pop into my head that I go in and create from. That happens every now and then. The work is important because you\u2019re trying to seek a higher level of consciousness about yourself. That\u2019s the motivation. But I don\u2019t make art to make things for the market place. I don\u2019t make art because I want to have a new set of works out there to be displayed and marketed to a gallery. I\u2019m interested in producing work that\u2019s meaningful to me. So, a lot of people don\u2019t see my work. But I\u2019m successful. I sell work, I place work in museums, a<\/span>s a publisher at Raven Fine Art Edition, I sell and place works in museum collections by other artists.\u00a0 So, I have the freedom to pursue my own creative interest and I don\u2019t have to compromise to make objects for the market to survive.<\/span><\/p>\n