{"id":6675,"date":"2020-02-27T04:30:55","date_gmt":"2020-02-27T04:30:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6675"},"modified":"2020-03-05T21:52:24","modified_gmt":"2020-03-05T21:52:24","slug":"10-breakthrough-women-artists-as-polled-by-black-owned-art-galleries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6675","title":{"rendered":"10 Breakthrough Women Artists As Polled By Black-Owned Art Galleries"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson\u00a0<\/span><\/pre>\nBlack women artists, in recent years, have been receiving more acclaim than they have in the past. But they are still largely unrecognized for their contributions to visual art that spur conversations on justice and equity. This year Black Art in America polled black-owned art galleries to find out who the 10 Breakthrough Black Women artists are. We spoke to Stella Jones Gallery, N\u2019Namdi Contemporary, Walton Gallery, Mariane Ibrahim, E&S Gallery, 10<\/span>th<\/span> Street Gallery, Richard Beavers, Zucot Gallery and Black Art in America. This list, of course, doesn\u2019t represent all the talented black women artists doing great things, but what this list does is highlight the artists who have proven to be trailblazing in the collections they have been acquired into, the exhibitions where they have shown, and the ingenuity of their art.<\/span><\/p>\nBisa Butler<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nArt quilter extraordinaire, Bisa Butler, doesn\u2019t apply paint to her canvases but the highly contrasted images she creates begs for closer inspection. Butler modernizes historical figures in an effort to bring them back to life. Figures like Josephine Baker, Frederick Douglas and Jackie Robinson have held their space on her canvases imploring the viewer to see them anew. The colors she sews together in order to create subjects of colorful hue are derived from black and white photographs she stylizes. The subjects\u2019 placement on muted or vibrant backdrops help illuminate her subjects\u2019 liveliness while at the same time illustrating their significance. With no paint applied to the canvases Butler creates, she painstakingly makes shadows and light with fabric that give dimension to her subjects. The beauty of her quilts is not solely in the importance of the subject matter in modern times, but the innovation and sense of bravado Butler employs to paint with fabric that has been relegated as woman\u2019s work.<\/span><\/p>\nDelita Martin<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nBeneath the paint, textiles, and collaging, Delita Martin features real black women in artworks that celebrate their beauty, strength, pain, and resilience. Inspired by vintage and family photographs, Martin uses visual language to tell oral stories. The narratives told in her paintings render sincere, intimate, and honest stories of women who may not be mentioned in contemporary news or history books, but whom we all are familiar. They are mothers, sisters, aunts, and cousins who work tirelessly to maintain family life and order but who many not receive apt credit for their work. Using traditional African textiles to overlay her images, Martin calls back to the motherland connecting the tradition of black women as the backbone of the community in Africa as well as throughout the Diaspora. While the women depicted in Martin\u2019s artworks may not be overtly celebrated for their contributions to the world, by immortalizing them on canvas, she offers them acclaim.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n