Her name was Augusta Savage. She worked in the first half of the 20th Century. Her work was realistic, moving, tender and humorous.
In a different time, she might have worked in bronze or stone. Never well-off, never with a wealthy patron, she sculpted in clay or even plaster burnished with shoe polish.
One of her largest pieces, The Harp, was commissioned for the 1939 World's Fair in New York City. Sixteen feet tall, made of painted plaster, it was thrown away after the Fair ended.
In the 1920s, she was accepted into a summer class at a fine-arts school in France -- only to have the offer withdrawn by the American selection committee when they discovered she was African-American.
She made and taught art all her life. Though the many of her works have been lost other than in photographs, she had lasting influence. Her own opinion of her legacy was both humble and optimistic:
"I have created nothing really beautiful, really lasting, but if I can
inspire one of these youngsters to develop the talent I know they
possess, then my monument will be in their work."
Not every monument is a lump of bronze on a pedestal. Augusta Savage showed that art belongs to those who have talent and develop it, and helped change a nation's perceptions.
Update
6 days ago
1 comment:
Wow! Ms Savage's work was amazingly beautiful and real. Thank you for the introduction.
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