First Day of
Issue: April 11, 2012 |
One of the
country’s foremost African-American artists, William H. Johnson
(1901-1970) will
be recognized as a major figure in 20th-century American art.
Known for his colorful, folk-inspired scenes of African-American daily
life as well as his dramatic Scandinavian landscapes, Johnson is
recognized on the 11th issuance in the American Treasures
series with a still-life painting entitled
Flowers.
An oil-on-plywood
painting dated 1939-1940, Flowers depicts a vase of boldly
rendered, brightly colored blooms on a small red table. The
two-dimensional, consciously “naive” style in which Flowers was
painted was one of the many techniques of modernist abstraction and
“primitive” art adapted by Johnson during his career. The painting, a gift
of the Harmon Foundation, belongs to the
As a child, he
practiced drawing by copying comic strips from the newspaper. At the age
of 17 he went to live with his uncle in
This
stamp is being issued as a Forever stamp. Forever stamps are always equal
in value to the current First-Class Mail one-ounce
rate.
|
The event will take place
at Morgan State University (MSU), as the exhibition stops there as part of its
10 city tour. The exhibition is an opportunity to share some of the
artist's work and treasured collection from the Historically Black College, MSU
who owns the featured 20 portraits, with a broad
audience.
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