Remaking Race and History
by
Renée Ater; Renée Ater
This study focuses on the life and public sculpture of Meta Warrick Fuller (1877-1968), one of the early twentieth century's few African American women artists. To understand Fuller's strategy for negotiating race, history, and visual representation, Renée Ater examines the artist's contributions to three early twentieth-century expositions: the Warwick Tableaux, a set of dioramas for the Jamestown Tercentennial Exposition (1907); Emancipation, a freestanding group for the National Emancipation Exposition (1913); and Ethiopia, the figure of a single female for the America's Making Exposition (1921). Ater argues that Fuller's efforts to represent black identity in art provide a window on the Progressive Era and its heated debates about race, national identity, and culture.
Call Number: NB237.F85 A88 2011
ISBN: 9780520262126
Publication Date: 2011-11-22
Pieces of Freedom
by
Lee Ann Timreck; Alex Bostic (Afterword by)
"Pieces of Freedom: The Emancipation Sculptures of Edmonia Lewis and Meta Warwick Fuller" analyzes the first fifty years of Black freedom through the emancipation sculptures of two nineteenth-century African American sculptors, Mary Edmonia Lewis (1844-1909) and Meta Warrick Fuller (1877-1968). In this book, Lee Ann Timreck integrates Lewis's and Fuller's visual narrative with oral narratives of the newly emancipated, all set within the historical context of Reconstruction, segregation, and Jim Crow. The sculptures also reflect the artists' gendered perspective of emancipation, conveying a strong narrative on the contributions and sacrifices made by newly freed Black women. These emancipation sculptures provide both a historical narrative of the Black emancipation experience and a moral narrative of America's failure to create a nation where "all men are created equal."
Call Number: On order
ISBN: 9781496845887
Publication Date: 2023-07-31
Meta Warrick Fuller: Trailblazing African American Sculptor