Blues on the brush: Rose Piper's 'Blues and Negro Folk Songs' paintings of the 1940s

Lula, Guitar Blues, Back Water, I Been to the City, St Louis Cyclone Blues, Conjur, I'm Gonna Take My Wings and Cleave the Air, Long, Long Time to Freedom, The Death of Bessie Smith, Slow Down, Freight Train, Grievin' Hearted and Empty Bed Blues.10 (The two remaining canvases were Subway N...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inThe International review of African American art Vol. 22; no. 1; pp. 18 - 29
Main Author Lock, Graham
Format Journal Article Magazine Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hampton Hampton University Museum 01.01.2008
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Lula, Guitar Blues, Back Water, I Been to the City, St Louis Cyclone Blues, Conjur, I'm Gonna Take My Wings and Cleave the Air, Long, Long Time to Freedom, The Death of Bessie Smith, Slow Down, Freight Train, Grievin' Hearted and Empty Bed Blues.10 (The two remaining canvases were Subway Nuns, based on lines from a poem by Myron O'Higgins, and Circus Clowns.)11 The exhibition proved a great success: it was well-received in the press, its run was extended for an extra week and many of the paintings were sold. 58 And her political purpose, that desire to place injustice on the canvas, remained strong: noting that the current state of many inner-city blacks is not unlike the desperate situation of the slave ancestors,59 Piper set half of her Slave Song paintings in contemporary cityscapes, most notably I Want Yuh To Go Down, Death, Easy / An' Bring My Servant Home, in which she depicted her local subway station, 96th Street, where the skeletal figure of Death, dressed in a blue velvet robe and white lace gloves, waits to escort home a destitute woman, who sits crumpled in rags on the platform floor.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
content type line 24
ObjectType-Feature-1
SourceType-Magazines-1
ISSN:1045-0920