Mean Dog (Verso: Man Leading Mule), c. 1939-1942, by Bill Traylor, poster paint and pencil on cardboard
(Matt Flynn © Smithsonian Institution)
A new show at the Smithsonian American Art museum highlights his work
Amy Crawford
September 2018
Bill Traylor (1853-1949) was emancipated from
slavery at the end of the Civil War when he was about 12 years old, but
his family remained on their former owner’s Alabama cotton plantation,
and he spent most of his life as a tenant farmer. It wasn’t until
Traylor was in his 80s that he began creating art. Today, he is
considered one of the most important self-taught artists of the 20th
century, and this month, 155 of his more than 1,100 paintings and
drawings go on display at the Smithsonian American Art Museum—the first
major retrospective for an artist born into slavery. Because his work is
dense with personal symbolism and often deliberately obscure, early
collectors considered it quaint or even humorous, overlooking the dark
themes of plantation life, Jim Crow and lynching. “He keeps his meanings
subtle,” says curator Leslie Umberger. Still, she says, his images “are
this very loud assertion that he is a person and has a story to tell
and has a right to tell it.”
Smithsonian.com
Smithsonian.com
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