{"id":6599,"date":"2020-02-12T11:48:24","date_gmt":"2020-02-12T11:48:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6599"},"modified":"2020-03-03T10:43:57","modified_gmt":"2020-03-03T10:43:57","slug":"setting-the-artworld-ablaze-looking-at-the-artistic-legacy-of-reginald-gammon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6599","title":{"rendered":"Setting the Artworld Ablaze: Looking at the Artistic Legacy of Reginald Gammon"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson<\/span><\/pre>\nBorn in 1913, Philadelphia-born artist, Reginald Gammon fought for civil rights through his art. His work can be read for relevance in relation to inequality toward the African American community and the power of a people who prevail under oppression. Gammon, who died in 2005, left behind a worthy legacy of activism for the rights and inclusion of black artists into dominant art spaces in addition to the work he created on canvases. Though his artwork speaks to the conditions that black people in the United States endured, Gammon\u2019s corporeality was the true mark of a civil servant. He served the people by protesting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of Art for representation. While many of us enjoy the fight that Gammon fought, his work shouldn\u2019t be an oversight. And we should recognize him and others for the rights we have today as artists, art scholars, and other artworld insiders.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nWhen Gammon moved to New York in 1948 he worked multiple odd jobs, but he continued to paint at night. He was invited to join Spiral in 1963. Spiral was an art collective of the most celebrated African American artists at the time. Members included Romare Bearden, Hale Woodruff, Norman Lewis, Emma Amos, Richard Mayhew and others. They only had one exhibition as a group and there aren\u2019t any reviews of it, but that is essentially indicative of the world in which they created art. In 1969, after Spiral disbanded, Gammon and Benny Andrews formed Black Emergency Cultural Coalition. The formation of this group happened around the time The Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited <\/span>Harlem on My Mind: Cultural Capital of Black America, 1900-1968 <\/span><\/i>that was curated without the consultation or inclusion of any of the residents of the Harlem community. Gammon, Andrews and others protested the exhibition because while the show was about Harlem, no Harlem artists were asked to contribute work to the exhibition. The exhibition was basically an ethnographic study of photographs with black people as subjects. Amazingly, the exhibition, in 1969, occurred at the apex of the Civil Rights Movement and The Black Power Movement. The museum executives claimed they were trying to decrease the size of the gap that was forming between the white population and black population, but this novel intention was poorly executed. The exhibition resulted in what would be typical of the white savior ignoring the voices of a people who could speak for themselves and muting them by inserting their own voices into a one-way conversation.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n