OF HER BECOMING: ELIZABETH CATLETT’S LEGACY IN CHICAGO JUNE 14 - AUGUST 31, 2024
Photo Credit: Natasha Moustache
Of Her Becoming celebrates the printmaking, work, and impact of influential artist and activist Elizabeth Catlett (1915–2012) within an important site in Catlett’s career: Chicago’s South Side. Curated by Sheridan Tucker Anderson, the exhibition showcases an array of Catlett’s lithograph and linoleum prints alongside works by contemporary Black women printmakers from the South Side, Angela Davis Fegan, Krista Franklin, and Rebel Betty.
Examining the significance of Catlett’s time on the City’s South Side, this exhibition sheds new light on a period that revolutionized her artistic practice, and how her legacy still impacts artists and community organizers today.
We invite you to experience the exhibit yourself at the Arts + Public Life’s (APL’s) Arts Incubator Gallery through August 31st. Consider accompanying your visit with a selection from Seminary Co-op Bookstore's reading list to situate Catlett's work within her broader life and career as well as within the social contexts of Black American artists and the women of Chicago's South Side.
OF HER BECOMING: ELIZABETH CATLETT’S LEGACY IN CHICAGO is funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art and supported by Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Los Angeles, CA.
301 E. Garfield Blvd | Thursday-Saturday 1PM-5PM
More information on the exhibit can be found here.
Persevere and Resist: The Strong Black Women of Elizabeth Catlett
Heather Nickels
Elizabeth Catlett: An American Artist in Mexico
Melanie Anne Herzog
Elizabeth Catlett: A Black Revolutionary Artist and All That It Implies
Dalila Scruggs
Black Artists in America: From the Great Depression to Civil Rights
Earnestine Lovelle Jenkins
Lifting as They Climbed: Mapping a History of Trailblazing Black Women in Chicago
Essence McDowell and Mariame Kaba
Great Women Artists
Phaidon Press Editors
The Chicago Black Renaissance and Women's Activism
Anne Meis Knupfer
South Side Venus: The Legacy of Margaret Burroughs
Mary Ann Cain
The Wall of Respect: Public Art and Black Liberation in 1960s Chicago
Abdul Alkalimat, Rebe Zorach, and Romi Crawford
Frida & Diego: Art, Love, Life
Catherine Reef
About Elizabeth Catlett:
Elizabeth Catlett (1915–2012) was an American and Mexican artist known for her sculptures and prints featuring African American women.
Elizabeth Catlett was born at Freedmen’s Hospital in Washington, DC. Both her maternal and paternal grandparents were born enslaved, a family legacy that influenced her art. Catlett knew from a young age that she wanted to be an artist. After Carnegie Mellon rescinded her acceptance due to her race, she attended Howard University, graduating in 1935 with a BS in Art. Following her graduation, she supervised elementary school art programs in Durham, North Carolina. In 1939, she began graduate studies in art at the University of Iowa, where she shifted her focus from painting to sculpture, and became the first woman to receive a MFA in sculpture from the University of Iowa. Her master's thesis, a limestone sculpture entitled Negro Mother and Child (1940) won first place in sculpture at the 1940 Chicago American Negro Exposition. Her work often centered black women.
In 1940, Catlett met her first husband, fellow artist Charles White, in Chicago. The couple married in 1941 and moved to New Orleans, but later relocated to Harlem, New York. In New York, Catlett encountered some of the most famous and influential artists and writers of the time including Loïs Mailou Jones, Charles Alston, Aaron Douglas, Jacob Lawrence, and Langston Hughes. She began studying lithography and modernist sculpture and in 1945, she received a grant from the Rosenwald Foundation to produce a body of work focusing on black women.
In 1946, Catlett and White moved to Mexico where Catlett was a guest artist at the printmaking collective, Taller de Gráfica Popular (TGP, People's Graphic Arts Workshop). The artists of TGP used linoleum prints and woodcuts to create didactic sociopolitical art.
While in Mexico, Catlett and White divorced. She remarried Mexican artist Francisco Mora with whom she had three sons. In the 1950s, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and the U.S. embassy in Mexico investigated the TGP and Catlett specifically for her bold artwork, political activism, and communist affiliations. The United States government declared her an “undesirable alien,” which impaired her ability to return to the United States. In 1962, she became a Mexican citizen.
Inspired by the artistic activism within her circle of Mexican artists including Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, and David Siqueiros, Catlett continued creating images that showed the constant struggle and surprising strength of women, African Americans, those experiencing poverty, and disadvantaged social classes. Throughout her career, Catlett continued to carry these themes through in her bronze, wooden, and terracotta sculptures, prints, and paintings. Her U.S. citizenship was reinstated in 2002. Catlett lived and worked between Cuernavaca, Mexico, and New York City until her death in 2012. Her work has been featured around the world.
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