Art, Education, and African-American Culture

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A01=Mary Ann Meyers
African American influence on art institutions
African diaspora aesthetics
Author_Mary Ann Meyers
barnes
Barnes Board
Barnes Collection
Barnes Foundation
Barnes Trustees
Barnes's Death
Barnes’s Death
Bryn Mawr
Category=ABQ
Category=DNBM
Category=JBCC
Category=JBSL
Circuit Court
cultural philanthropy analysis
De Mazia
early modernist painting scholarship
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
foundation
Foundation's Request
Foundation’s Request
Johnson Collection
Latch's Lane
Latch’s Lane
legal disputes in art collections
Leopold Stokowski
Lower Merion
mazia
Mullen Sisters
museum studies research
Pennsylvania Academy
Pennsylvania Museum
Philadelphia Museum
progressive education theory
Puvis De Chavannes
Rue De Fleurus
Superb
Van Vechten
Violette De Mazia
Walter Annenberg
William Glackens
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412805636
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jan 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A physician who applied his knowledge of chemistry to the manufacture of a widely used antiseptic, Albert Barnes is best remembered as one of the great American art collectors. The Barnes Foundation, which houses his treasures, is a fabled repository of Impressionist, post-Impressionist, and early modern paintings. Less well known is the fact that Barnes attributed his passion for collecting art to his youthful experience of African-American culture, especially music. Art, Education, and African-American Culture is both a biography of an iconoclastic and innovative figure and a study of the often-conflicted efforts of an emergent liberalism to seek out and showcase African American contributions to the American aesthetic tradition.

Mary Ann Meyers examines Barnes's background and career and the development and evolution of his enthusiasm for collecting pictures and sculpture. She shows how Barnes's commitment to breaking down invidious distinctions and his use of the uniquely arranged works in his collection as textbooks for his school, created a milieu where masterpieces of European and American late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century painting, along with rare and beautiful African art objects, became a backdrop for endless feuding. A gallery requiring renovation, a trust prohibiting the loan or sale of a single picture, and the efforts of Lincoln University, known as the "black Princeton," to balance conflicting needs and obligations all conspired to create a legacy of legal entanglement and disputes that remain in contention.

This volume is neither an idealized account of a quixotic do-gooder nor is it a critique of a crank. While fully documenting Barnes's notorious eccentricities along with the clashing interests of the main personalities associated with his Foundation, Meyers eschews moral posturing in favor of a rich mosaic of peoples and institutions that illustrate many of the larger themes of American culture in general and African-American culture in particular.

Mary Ann Meyers is secretary and a director of the American Academy of Political and Social Science and the senior fellow at the John Templeton Foundation. She is the author of A New World Jerusalem: The Swedenborgian Experience in Community Construction and a coauthor of Religion in American Life and Coping with Serious Illness.

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