NJ LEEP, inc. – NJ LEEP Auction for Urban Education
Auction Ends: Apr 18, 2012 08:00 PM EDT

Art

Signed Serigraph by Faith Ringgold: Groovin" High

Item Number
136
Estimated Value
1500 USD
Opening Bid
400 USD  -  Item Has a Reserve

Live Event Item

After the online close, this item went to a Live Event for further bidding.

Item Description

This is a serigraph by internationally renowned 20th Century artist Faith Ringgold, whose work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, among other prestigious venues.  Faith Ringgold's bio is as follows:

Faith Ringgold was born October 8, 1930, in New York, New York. Ringgold grew up in New York City's Harlem, and while still in high school she decided to be an artist. She attended City College of New York, where she received B.S. (1955) and M.A. (1959) degrees. In the mid-1950s she began teaching art in New York public schools. By the 1960s her work had matured, reflecting her burgeoning political consciousness, study of African arts and history, and appreciation for the freedom of form used by her young students.

In 1963 Ringgold began a body of paintings called the American People series, which portrays the civil rights movement from a female perspective. In the 1970s she created African-style masks, painted political posters, lectured frequently at feminist art conferences, and actively sought the racial integration of the New York art world. She originated a demonstration against the Whitney Museum of American Art and helped win admission for black artists to the exhibit schedule at the Museum of Modern Art. In 1970 she cofounded, with one of her daughters, the advocacy group Women Students and Artists for Black Art Liberation.

Among Ringgold's most renowned works, her “story quilts” were inspired by the Tibetan tankas (paintings framed in cloth) that she viewed on a visit to museums in Amsterdam. She painted these quilts with narrative images and original stories set in the context of African American history. Her mother frequently collaborated with her on these. Examples of this work includes Who's Afraid of Aunt Jemima? (1984), Sonny's Quilt (1986), and Tar Beach (1988), which Ringgold adapted into a children's book in 1991. The latter book, which was named Caldecott Honor Book in 1992, tells of a young black girl in New York City who dreams about flying. Ringgold's later books for children include Aunt Harriet's Underground Railroad in the Sky (1992) and My Dream of Martin Luther King (1995). Her memoirs, We Flew over the Bridge, were published in 1995.

Item Special Note

Framing is available and is additional unless otherwise noted.  For inspection or more information, call House of Art at (347) 663-8195.