Decades of Acquisitions: Works on Paper from the Collection

Decades of Acquisitions: Works on Paper from the Collection

529 W. 20th Street #10ENew York, NY 10011, USA Thursday, February 24, 2022–Saturday, April 30, 2022


horse woman on the chair by wifredo lam

Wifredo Lam

Horse Woman on The Chair, 1951

Price on Request

untitled by norman lewis

Norman Lewis

Untitled, 1951

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self portrait by glenn ligon

Glenn Ligon

Self Portrait, 2020

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tomato on black by maceo mitchell

Maceo Mitchell

Tomato on Black, 1998

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untitled by danny simmons

Danny Simmons

Untitled, 2006

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corridor (bulb) by lorna simpson

Lorna Simpson

Corridor (Bulb), 2003

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the disciples see christ walking on the water by henry ossawa tanner

Henry Ossawa Tanner

The Disciples See Christ Walking on the Water

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odalisque with alien by william villalongo

William Villalongo

Odalisque with Alien

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the secret sharerer by kara walker

Kara Walker

the secret sharerer, 2010

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when and where i enter (from roaming series) by carrie mae weems

Carrie Mae Weems

When and Where I Enter (from Roaming Series), 2006

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torso by hale aspacio woodruff

Hale Aspacio Woodruff

Torso, ca. 1960

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Since 1979, the Bill Hodges Gallery has established itself as a collector and exhibitor of works by underrepresented American artists. This upcoming exhibition offers a fascinating glimpse of American art by African American artists.  

Decades of Acquisitions: Works on Paper from the Collection presents rarely seen contemporary prints, drawings, and paintings on paper in the collection, ranging from the conceptual to the religious, the landscape, the abstract, and the poetic. It seeks to do more that elevate the works of artists many of whom were denied the public acclaim they deserved and tell the story of American art itself. 

Historically, American artists have had an uneasy relationship with those from other countries, especially continental Europe. Black American artists have also had a fraught relationship with their domestic peers and audiences. The artists celebrated in this new exhibition saw these tensions, as insultingly dismissive as they sometimes were, as opportunities to develop new visual vernaculars that reflect the American experience more truly—and sometimes painfully—than those of their white counterparts. 

The exhibition’s earliest work, Edward M. Bannister’s The Hay Wagon is a perfect early example of this. It is thought to have been painted in the early 1880s, as Bannister began to bring impressionistic techniques to bear on his bucolic, Barbizon-inspired landscapes. He and William Morris Hunt were the chief American representatives of the Barbizon school. Both became celebrated, award-winning painters during their lifetime in the late 19th Century. But Bannister saw, earlier and more clearly than Hunt, that Impressionism allowed a different and for him a powerfully necessary relationship between the artist and the viewer. 

Another significant work featured in this exhibition is Lyle Ashton Harris’s 60 x 40 inch gelatin silver print Minstrel, from 1988. It portrays the artist in whiteface and a straw hat, wearing an exaggerated and perhaps mockingly histrionic frown. An early work, Minstrel heralds Harris’s continued explorations of Black representation in the broader culture, including Harris’s identity as a queer Black man.  

This exhibition continues this theme by presenting artists using diverse materials and printmaking techniques. 

Hale Woodruff’s Torso, a sketch in crayon and charcoal drawn ca. 1960, finds the artist returning to the abstract approach he studied in France, where he married cubist techniques with African themes under the mentorship of expatriate American artist Henry Ossawa Tanner. Woodruff had set abstraction aside after returning from France to document African-American life in the South and traveling to Mexico to study under famed muralist Diego Rivera. Torso announces the last great movement of Woodruff’s artistic life, in which he used cubist techniques explicitly to explore the metaphysical underpinnings of African-American life.

On another note, Stanley Whitney is represented by his signature stacked composition of numerous saturated color fields, Stay Songs from 2002. Proceeding from Whitney’s ongoing experiments with color field painting, this work includes some of Whitney’s most ambitious and electric studies of form to date. It balances the austere and the improvisational, the parlor-room ingenuity of American quilting, and the disciplined flights of bebop jazz, making it, like the entire exhibition itself, a singular statement and a holographic representation of American art. 

Decades of Acquisitions: Works on Paper from the Collection also features works by Wifredo Lam, Norman Lewis, Romare Bearden, Eldzier Cortor, William Carter, Agustin Cardenas, Benny Andrews, Richard Hunt, Charles Gaines,  Maceo Mitchell, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Roy DeCarava, Carrie Mae Weems, Lorna Simpson, Willie Cole, William Villalongo, Kara Walker, and Glenn Ligon. 


Bill Hodges Gallery is located at 529 W. 20th Street, suite #10E, between 10th Avenue and 11th Avenue. Our closest subway stations are 14th St. & 8th Ave. (A-C-E) and 23rd St. & 8th Ave. (C-E). The gallery is open Monday to Friday from 11 AM – 6 PM. Saturday from 12:30 PM – 5:30 PM. The gallery is implementing social distancing measures and we kindly ask that guests wear appropriate personal protection equipment. Masks and hand sanitizer provided. For more information or to arrange a private viewing, please contact the gallery at (212) 333-2640 or at [email protected].