{"id":6316,"date":"2020-04-17T12:52:00","date_gmt":"2020-04-17T12:52:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6316"},"modified":"2020-04-25T15:05:56","modified_gmt":"2020-04-25T15:05:56","slug":"danny-simmons-a-critical-path-by-howard-mccalebb","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6316","title":{"rendered":"Danny Simmons: A Critical Path By Howard McCalebb"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n Danny Simmons is an American artist from Hollis, Queens, New York, who showed a predisposition towards the visual arts at a young age. He earned a degree in social work from <\/span>New York University <\/span><\/i>and a master’s degree in public finance from <\/span>Long Island University Brooklyn<\/span><\/i>. He abandoned his career in social work to become a full time artist in 1988. In 2012 Simmons received an honorary PhD in fine arts from <\/span>Long Island University Brooklyn<\/span><\/i>.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n “Go ahead and quit your job and be an artist nobody will let you starve.” – <\/b>Evelyn Simmons to her son Danny Jr.\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n Simmons may have persevered for years before changing careers.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The painter Paul Gauguin also entered art practice from another profession. In 1873, around the same time as he became a stockbroker, he began painting in his free time. Eventually he became an artist full time, and ended up in Tahiti where he died in 1903.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n In 1915, the sculptor Alexander Calder went to study for a degree in Mechanical Engineering at the <\/span>Stevens Institute of Technology <\/span><\/i>in Hoboken, New Jersey. However, his father Alexander Stirling Calder was an American sculptor and teacher; his grandfather Alexander Milne Calder was also a sculptor, and his mother was a painter. Obviously, Calder had a foot in the art world his entire life. He did a number of jobs after graduation in 1919, but in the early 1920s he finally gave up engineering to become an artist.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Andy Warhol also moved into the \u201cfine arts\u201d from another paid occupation, after studying Commercial Art at the <\/span>Carnegie Institute of Technology <\/span><\/i>(now <\/span>Carnegie Mellon University<\/span><\/i>) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he was born and raised. He earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in pictorial design in 1949. Later that year, he moved to New York City and began a successful career dedicated to commercial and advertising art. In the early 1960s, his thriving career as a commercial Illustrator came to an abrupt and unforeseen end, as photography overtook the commercial art field. Confused and worried, Warhol began to look around for an alternative livelihood, ultimately making the risky decision to move into the fine arts. As a fine artist, he carried his past into his new life; by blurring the lines between commercial art and \u201chigh\u201d art aesthetics, with a focus on consumer goods. He innovated a hybrid drawing\/painting\/printmaking technique that distorted brand images of Campbell Soup cans, Coca-Cola bottles, and Hollywood celebrities. After parlaying his commercial art expertise into a fine art practice he became perhaps the most important artist of his generation.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Jeff Koons worked as a commodities broker. In 1980, he got licensed to sell mutual funds and stocks and began a career on Wall Street. Today, he is a world famous artist.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n <\/a>Simmons\u2019 determined foray into the contemporary art field began with a first group of paintings that were a series of (mostly anonymous) Cubist- Surrealist facial portraits, or what a photographer might call headshots. These facial treatments (mythological conjuring) showed a proclivity for Modernist fragmentation and distortion, what Europeans experienced as the dissonant qualities of African masks. These treatments are reminiscent of artwork by Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Roberto Matta, Pablo Picasso, and Francis Bacon.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n During a period in the 1950s, Romare Bearden produced a significant body of abstract paintings. Around 1963, Bearden debuted what would become his world-renowned \u201crepresentational\u201d collages. Simmons did the opposite: after producing a significant body of representational paintings, he decided to re-focus on abstraction, as an area for exploration and development, while maintaining his notion of the ritualistic-magical aspects of African art \u201cI just moved my representation of our culture from figurative abstraction to non figurative abstraction both relate who we are to our African heritage\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n