SearchOpportunitiesEventsAbout UsHubs
C&
Magazines
Projects
Education
Community
Event

Revelations: Art from the African American South

San Francisco, United Statesde Young Museum3 June 2017 - 1 April 2018
Revelations: Art from the African American South

Revelations: Art from the African American South

Revelations: Art from the African American South celebrates the debut of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco major acquisition from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation in Atlanta of 62 works by contemporary African American artists from the Southern United States. Included in the current acquisition are paintings, sculptures, drawings, and quilts by 22 acclaimed artists, including Thornton Dial, Ralph Griffin, Bessie Harvey, Lonnie Holley, Joe Light, Ronald Lockett, Joe Minter, Jessie T. Pettway, Mary T. Smith, Mose Tolliver, Annie Mae Young, and Purvis Young. The history of the partnership between the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Souls Grown Deep Foundation dates back to 2006, when the Museums hosted the loan exhibition The Quilts of Gee’s Bend. The cultural origins of these artworks can be traced back to the African Diaspora, slavery, and the Jim Crow era of institutionalized racism, which restricted both physical freedom and freedom of expression for African Americans. Despite these barriers, in the segregated and comparatively safe spaces of churches and cemeteries, as well as in the fields and forests, African Americans created a cultural language that led to the evolution of distinctly African American musical forms such as gospel, blues, jazz, and rock ‘n’ roll. These rich musical traditions were paralleled by visual traditions that typically were symbolic in form or concealed from view in order to escape censure or destruction. Working with little or no formal training, and often employing cast-off objects and unconventional materials, these artists have created visually compelling works that address some of the most profound and persistent issues in American society, including race, class, gender, and religion. Only during the modern civil rights movement did these visual traditions and their messages move into the open—initially in the private yards of African American homes, and later in commercial galleries and public museums. Historically marginalized, patronized, or promoted with reductive terms such as folk, naive, or outsider, these artists have earned equal consideration in the history of American art. Put in the context of the larger American Art collection at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the works—which include some of the finest contemporary art created in the United States—have the potential to influence American cultural studies to more accurately reflect the nation’s historical diversity and complexity. de Young Museum Golden Gate Park 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive San Francisco, CA 94118 https://deyoung.famsf.org

View more from

Beyond Representation

Beyond Representation

Pérez Art Museum Miami
Dec 7, 2023–Dec 31, 2026
Diverse work uniforms displayed on stands in a bright room with large windows.

Dignidade e luta: Laudelina de Campos Mello

Instituto Moreira Salles
May 16–Nov 22, 2026
An art installation of white fabric ropes hangs within a bright atrium with a glass ceiling, some looping in the foreground, others vertical against a large window overlooking a city.

Cecilia Vicuña - The vanished glacier

Castello di Rivoli
Apr 30–Sep 20, 2026
A man leans against large speakers next to a customized mobile record shack called "Swing A Ling," painted with music genres like Reggae and Soul.

Dancing the Revolution

Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
Apr 11–Sep 20, 2026
Illustration of two naked people in a teal bathroom; one sits on the edge of a bubble bath holding a katana, while the other relaxes in the bubbles with a drink.

The Object of Power is Power

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art
May 6–Sep 20, 2026