MILWAUKEE — Benny Andrews was a painter, in addition to an activist, an artwork educator in prisons, and an inspiration to many Black artists. He made figurative work using a method he known as “rough collage,” the place he selectively constructed up components of the composition with paper or cloth.
Previous to his demise in 2006, on the age of 75, he organized a basis to protect his studio in Brooklyn and oversee his property. Hassle at Ruth Arts, the exhibition house run by the Ruth Basis for the Arts, was organized in collaboration with the Benny Andrews Property. The exhibition is fantastically located on this newly renovated house of brick partitions and pure mild. A lot of the works are portraits. Work that extra straight touch upon race and politics, resembling “No More Games” (1970) within the Museum of Trendy Artwork’s assortment, are absent right here. But each facet of Andrews’s life concerned combating and caring for his personal neighborhood, and the portraits replicate this.
Andrews was taken with artwork as a baby, rising up in a sharecropper household in Georgia with 9 siblings. After serving within the Korean Conflict, he enrolled on the College of the Artwork Institute of Chicago (SAIC), receiving his BFA in 1958. It was at SAIC that he started incorporating discovered supplies into his work; the earliest work on this present, “Janitors at Rest” (1957–58), presciently established his model for the rest of his profession.
Benny Andrews, “For Colored Girls” (1977), oil on canvas with painted cloth collage
Andrews was certainly one of 9 Black college students at SAIC within the Nineteen Fifties. He was additionally one of many few dedicated to figurative work whereas Summary Expressionism reigned. He wrote in an unpublished essay, included within the present’s handouts, that he was not widespread and didn’t get invited to social occasions. As a substitute, he discovered kinship with the college’s custodial employees, who had been Black and likewise from the South. Andrews would go to them, the place they frolicked within the males’s room, to speak and share a sip of whiskey. The custodians’ calloused fingers and worn overalls, he mentioned, felt acquainted. The day he had his artistic breakthrough, he had gone down the corridor from his portray class to speak with them. “I went back to my class and started painting my idea of them,” he wrote. When the portray nonetheless didn’t really feel proper, he returned to the lads’s room, the place he grabbed hand towels and strips of bathroom paper, “and like a crazed person, I ran to my class, put my canvas on the floor, spread torn pieces of towels and tissues … then painted furiously.”
“Janitors at Rest” is a smeary work, with stops and begins, and a scrappy composition that displays the unleashed energies of its invention. Tough collage enabled Andrews to deal with his personal background via the textures of the folks with whom he recognized. Scraps of fabric or crumpled paper turned interventions within the historical past of portray, a subversive and insistent technique of encompassing his personal non-White, non-urban roots.
Benny Andrews, “Portrait of Despair” (1985), oil and graphite on canvas with painted cloth collage
An plain immediacy is obvious in Andrews’s artwork. He balances constructive and unfavorable house, permitting every painterly transfer to have its personal second whereas leaving stress within the synapses. His figures, with their elongated limbs, convey a deeply thought of vary of human expression. The crumpled paper that varieties the bag in “Bag Woman” (1978), and the bits of fabric that poke out of it, are dangerous gadgets that would simply fail. However as an alternative, they provide a pop of sudden, playful, materials disruption. The work are fastidious and considerate, but relaxed in perspective. There was not one portray on this exhibition that didn’t make me wish to stick with it and soak within the artist’s sudden technique of constructing photos.
Benny Andrews, “Viola Andrews Teaching Sunday School” (1989), oil on canvas with painted cloth collage
One notable compositional gadget, in works resembling “For Colored Girls” (1977), or “Funeral” (1977), pairs people with vases of flowers. The flowers, hovering within the foreground or to the edges, appear as if small blessings consecrated in bursts of shade. The determine is usually positioned inside an undefined background, permitting the varieties and collaged textures to play brightly, as if on a stage. Andrews’s portraits stretch towards representing sorts as a lot as people (e.g., the mourner, the artist). “Viola Andrews Teaching Sunday School” (1989) reveals his mom wearing darkish Sunday garments, holding a Bible. Andrews renders her in a full-length pose, traditionally reserved for aristocracy. A flowery, floral purse dangles daintily from her wrist however her fist is clenched. She seems each form and powerful, without delay a singular lady and an emblem of girls who function church and neighborhood leaders. Andrews applies scraps of fabric to kind her garments, as soon as once more utilizing tough collage to bind the elevated finesse of portray to the locations and histories that inform his life, such because the make-do quilting practices of rural Black communities.
A close-by wall shows a number of self-portraits. We see Andrews as a younger man in his studio in “Studio” (1967). He faces a canvas, holding a brush. His torso is entombed in a pedestal, as if he and the studio are one. His good friend Alice Neel is within the background, sitting bare on a plinth, studying a guide. The ever-present flowers bloom from the wood floorboards. Andrews is a tall, skinny man with a beard. He stares on the canvas with the universally quizzical face of an artist considering his personal work. This piece is surrounded by drawings, a small sculpture, and a number of other different work of the artist within the studio, in addition to a 1978 lithograph by Neel displaying Andrews in a wrinkled work shirt.
4 glass instances within the exhibition show archival supplies, together with pictures, journal clippings, present playing cards, essays by Andrews (printed within the New York Instances and different publications), and studio artifacts. On prime of every desk are copies that guests can take dwelling. This method retains the artist’s personal phrases and life extra instant, nearly paralleling his collage methods. One essay discusses the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork’s now notorious 1969 exhibition Harlem on My Thoughts. It contained no work by Black artists. Andrews picketed the present and cofounded a coalition to demand artwork world fairness and inclusion. He and others would later protest the Whitney Museum’s 1971 Modern Black Artists in America for its lack of Black curatorial involvement.
Set up view of Benny Andrews: Hassle at The Ruth Basis for the Arts (picture Myrica von Haselberg)
Andrews was a fighter who achieved success and sway within the artwork world, with many reveals and museum acquisitions. However his work appears much less identified at present than a few of his friends, resembling Romare Bearden, Howardena Pindell, or Religion Ringgold. Maybe it’s because his observe veered from political commentary to portraiture. Or his use of discovered supplies and adherence to figuration impinged on the developments towards abstraction and pure portray. Regardless of this, his affect feels palpable, straight or not directly, on subsequent generations of Black figurative artists.
The title for this exhibition, Hassle, comes from Andrews’s studio journal entries dated 1965–72. “Trouble,” he says, is an expression of being alive. To be in bother is to embrace the wrestle and vulnerability of the method, a wall textual content explains. “Try to do what you want to do,” he wrote, “and try as much as possible to do it for yourself.”
Benny Andrews, “Studio” (1967), oil on canvas
Benny Andrews: Hassle continues at Ruth Arts (325 West Florida Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) via March 7. The exhibition was organized by Ruth Arts and the Benny Andrews Property.