Photography
Related: About this forumLived here for decades. Love Art. But only yesterday found this world class art all but in my path
There is an art exhibition town with lithographs and drawings, murals and sketches by an artist I have long admired.
John Biggers: take a quick look
http://tinyurl.com/hjbznaj
While at the exhibit I saw preliminary work citing murals at Winston Salem State University which was just around the corner from the gallery, and it became my next stop
http://www.wssu.edu/casbe/diggs-gallery/about/biographies/john-biggers-m.aspx
I got permission and shot a few simple photographs, want to share them with you
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,635 posts)And so close to you, too!
I love the colors, the details, the designs!
Wow.
Mira
(22,380 posts)I hope you clicked on the first link for sure. It will simply blow you away what this man saw and was able to show.
There was one lithograph in the exhibit, if I owned it, I would spend a half hour a day studying it. I must find a print of it if at all possible.
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,635 posts)And I ended up on Google!
I will try again later.
Dalai_1
(1,301 posts)It is incredible the details/how one mind can encompass so much and express it so masterfully!!!
alfredo
(60,074 posts)dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)How long ago was that painted?
In August 1988, Winston-Salem Delta Fine Arts, Inc. visited John Biggers at his studio in Houston to select works for an upcoming exhibition. After seeing some of the murals Dr. Biggers had painted in Texas, and after learning that during his 47-year career he had not painted one in his home state of North Carolina, Winston-Salem Delta Fine Arts decided to undertake a Mural project for Winston-Salem.
John Biggers agreed to paint two works to be hung in the atrium of the new addition to the O'Kelly Library (then under construction). Delta Fine Arts agreed to commission the commanding paintings. The artist presented the preliminary sketches for the murals in May 1990 and began painting in July. Winston-Salem Delta Fine Arts presented the murals to the university on March 28, 1992. Dr. Biggers was assisted by his nephew, James Biggers, Jr., an artist and art administrator for the Gaston County Schools.
The Biggers murals, Origins and Ascension, represent an integration of knowledge from many academic disciplines. African mythology and folklore are fused with mathematical concepts, scientific theories, literary extracts, American historical events, sociological patterns and religious beliefs.
Origins, located on the west wall of the atrium, addresses man's continuous quest to understand the forces behind the beginning of life. Ascension, on the east wall, interprets the experiences, hopes, suffering and joy of living in America. Though the dramatic images are characteristically African and African-American, the messages contained in each mural are universal and speak to all humanity. The people, animals, objects, colors, and shapes are layered with multiple meanings and symbolism. For example, the ever-present triangle represents the Egyptian pyramid, the African temple/cathedral, the ancient trinities (birth-life-death, life-death-rebirth, father-mother-child, heaven-earth-underworld) and the Holy Trinity, as well as physical stability.
John Biggers, a leading artist in America today, is internationally known as a painter, muralist, illustrator, sculptor and educator. A native of Gastonia, he studied at Hampton University and at Pennsylvania State University, where he earned the bachelor's, master's and doctorate degrees. He established and chaired for 34 years the Department of Art at Texas Southern University in Houston, before retiring in 1983. In 1988, he was recognized as the Texas Artist of the Year.
Adsos Letter
(19,459 posts)And beautifully captured.
2naSalit
(86,646 posts)What a find! I like the second one, it reminds me of the Sephirothc form of the Tree of Life. They have a very mystical feel, I can imagine what it's like to see them life sized.