The exhibition “Ancestry and Innovation: African American Art  from the Collection” currently on view at the American Folk Art  Museum through September 4, highlights complex and vibrant  quilts, paintings, works on paper and sculpture by contemporary  African American artists.   The exhibition, which is organized by curators Stacy C. Hollander  and Brooke Davis Anderson, explores through the museum’s rich  holdings the range of artistic expressions by self-taught African  American artists from the rural South and the urban North.  Comprising approximately nine quilts and nearly 30 works of art  in various media, “Ancestry and Innovation” includes paintings by  an elder generation of creators, such as Sam Doyle, David Butler,  Bessie Harvey and Clementine Hunter; works by contemporary  masters such as Thornton Dial Sr; and provocative pieces by  emerging artists such as Kevin Sampson and Willie LeRoy Elliot.  Juxtaposed with richly patterned and graphically exciting quilts,  the exhibition celebrates the ongoing contribution of black  artists to the kaleidoscope of American cultural and visual  experience.   Recently, important works by established artists in the cannon of  African American art have been acquired. These include an early  painting by Horace Pippin, a figural carving by William  Edmondson, and works on paper by Bill Traylor. Several major  gifts, such as the Blanchard-Hill collection, have also  contributed to the depth and diversity of the museum’s collection  in this area.   The museum’s collection of African American quilts is  characterized by brilliant and exuberant interpretations of  designs and techniques. The “Star of Bethlehem with Satellite  Stars Quilt” by Leola Pettway scintillates with eye-dazzling  color and improvisational riffs on a traditional pattern. Pettway  was born into a family of quilt makers from the insular African  American community of Gee’s Bend, Ala.   Idabell Bester’s “Strip Quilt” is filled with visual stops of  contrasting colors that recall the weft and warp of West African  men’s woven cloth. In “Snail Trail” by Mary Maxtion of Boligee,  Ala., a single, repeated motif explodes in scale and meanders off  the boundaries of the quilt. Many of the quilts, such as Mozell  Benson’s abstract “Strip Variation,” employ strong contrasts of  vibrant color in bold geometric forms.   Among the recent gifts on view for the first time is the  sculpture “Black Horse of Revelations” by Tennessee artist Bessie  Harvey. A fantastic, large-scale sculpture of twisted roots that  intersect one another to form the body of the animal is combined  with a simpler piece of wood embellished with fabric, beads and  glitter that depicts the rider sitting atop the animal. The  emotional power of this aggressive work is as terrifying and  startling as the biblical tale of the four horsemen of the  Apocalypse.   Clementine Hunter documented her community of Melrose Plantation,  Natchitoches, La., at work, play and church. The regal “Black  Matriarch” painting reveals all the hallmarks of Hunter’s style –  a flattened picture plane on which the schematic form and shape  of the woman is painted with dynamic punchy color combinations.  Her elaborate quiltlike headdress brings vibrant pulsing life to  the elegant, sensuously outlined silhouette of the woman.   In conjunction with the exhibition, educational programs are  scheduled and an article will be published in the spring issue of  Folk Art magazine.   The American Folk Art Museum is at 45 West 53rd Street. For  information, 212-265-1040.
 
    



 
						