{"id":6714,"date":"2020-03-03T12:17:29","date_gmt":"2020-03-03T12:17:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6714"},"modified":"2020-05-01T20:48:26","modified_gmt":"2020-05-01T20:48:26","slug":"10-breakthrough-black-men-artists-as-polled-by-black-owned-art-galleries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6714","title":{"rendered":"10 Breakthrough Black Men Artists As Polled By Black-Owned Art Galleries"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson\u00a0<\/span><\/pre>\nBlack men make a distinct contribution to the artworld as they create art that speaks to a diverse range of issues from community to commerce. Their standpoint comes from a historical experience belonging to a race that has generationally been terrorized and oppressed. For this list of the 10 Breakthrough Black Men Artists, we spoke to professionals at black-owned art galleries to find out which artists they felt were making major gains by their presence in collections, showing in museums and gallery spaces through exhibitions, and raising the bar by the ingenuity of their work. From recommendation of gallerists at 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, we compiled this list.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nAlfred Conteh\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\nAlfred Conteh\u2019s <\/span>Two Fronts<\/span><\/i>, works to convey the warlike atmosphere under which black men, women, and children exist. The likeness to camouflage that overlays the portraits of everyday people is not rendered accidentally.\u00a0 As black life is in a constant struggle to survive, Conteh recognizes the material circumstance under which black people battle economic and psychological injustice. Alfred Conteh\u2019s portraits feature people he has encountered on the street and in whom he recognizes a uniqueness. The realistic portrayals of Conteh\u2019s subjects delineate the circumstances of black life as more than merely theoretical, as scholarship on the condition of the people might suggest; their conditions are existential. While these are no more than portraits of everyday people, Conteh uses technique and style to suggest that there is conversation to be had underlying what the viewer can readily see. As far as portraits go, his execution is masterful, but as far as our perception goes, it is up to the viewer to viscerally experience the exchange.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nMarcus Jansen<\/strong><\/p>\nA military veteran, Marcus Jansen suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, which he was diagnosed with after returning from the Gulf War. His painting helps him sort out the traumas he experienced as a soldier. The scenes he paints are apocalyptic, but he employs bright colors tricking the eye into believing the scenes are not really about death and decay. Jansen\u2019s paintings speak to more than the darkness of war. Because of the color palette employed, we can think of them also as recovery or reclamation of the lives that escape to the aftermath and are able to live again, as he has done. While Jansen uses his art to critique societal issues and politics, the imaginative scenes he paints are not merely didactic and reductive. Instead, they challenge the eye to see past the bright color and meditate infinitely on the meaning of the scenes. Not readily decipherable, Jansen\u2019s paintings offer the viewer reflection on not only external issues of war but on our own thoughts about perhaps our complicity.<\/span><\/p>\n