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Saturday, February 25, 2023

Early Spring at Sainte-Anne's Hospital

On a brilliant, sunny day earlier this week, my husband Tom and I took a stroll through the grounds at Sainte-Anne's Hospital - Beauford's final residence. We visit from time to time to enjoy the peaceful gardens and imagine Beauford enjoying them as well.

It has been unseasonably warm in Paris this year, and we hoped to find a a multitude of colors and shapes in the flower beds and beneath the trees (some of which also flower) of the 7 hectares of green space that is managed by a team of 7 gardeners throughout the year.

We were a tad too early for this - there were loads of plants with green shoots in the beds along the main road that borders Parc Charles Baudelaire, but not as many flowers as we had hoped. We did find crocuses and snowdrops in abundance and the first daffodils of the season in this area.

Parc Charles Baudelaire - view from the street
© Entrée to Black Paris

Parc Charles Baudelaire - view from rear of park
© Entrée to Black Paris

Crocuses in Parc Charles Baudelaire
© Entrée to Black Paris

First daffodils
© Entrée to Black Paris

Snowdrops
© Entrée to Black Paris

A flowering tree in this park had lost almost all its flowers.

Bare flowering tree
© Entrée to Black Paris

Fallen flowers
© Entrée to Black Paris

Beauford would have been excited to see the vivid red of these English daisies.

English daisies
© Entrée to Black Paris

There was a fresh planting of pansies next to the lion statue in the park as well as around the sculpture of Daphne that is found in front of the pharmacy.

Pansies next to lion statue
© Entrée to Black Paris

Pansies next to lion statue - close-up
© Entrée to Black Paris

Flowers at the base of Daphne sculpture
© Entrée to Black Paris

A few poppies had also emerged at Daphne's base.

Poppies at the base of Daphne sculpture
© Entrée to Black Paris

Elsewhere on the grounds, we found a single cluster of white hyacinth along the covered walkway leading to the biology lab.

White hyacinth
© Entrée to Black Paris

We found that trees and bushes near the chapel had pushed out buds and early flowers.

Flowering shrub
© Entrée to Black Paris

Sumac
© Entrée to Black Paris

Ornamental cabbages and a single pink hyacinth are growing in a wall planter near the rue Alesia entrance.

Ornamental cabbage and pink hyacinth
© Entrée to Black Paris

And we found a tree full of white flowers in front of the Benjamin Ball pavilion, which may be where Beauford's room was located.

White flowering tree
© Entrée to Black Paris

A cold spell is due to sweep through Paris next week, so we'll wait a while before returning for another dose of spring.

Read previous articles about Sainte-Anne's Hospital by clicking on the links below:

Beauford's Paris: Sainte-Anne's Hospital - Part 1

Beauford's Paris: Sainte-Anne's Hospital - Part 2

Beauford's Paris: Saint Anne's Hospital - Part 3

Sainte Anne's Hospital: An Oasis of Calm

Beauford in "Psychology and Art" - Part 2

Sounds of Sainte-Anne's Hospital

Saturday, February 18, 2023

Beauford Delaney Research Grant - 2023 Application Period Is Now Open

Beauford Delaney
1953 - Carl Van Vechten

In 2021, the Bourse Beauford Delaney-Villa Albertine (Beauford Delaney Research Grant) was launched as a collaboration between Villa Albertine and the Institut national d'histoire de l'art (INHA). Supported by the Ford Foundation, it funds travel and other expenses related to research projects on African-American art undertaken by France-based academics and scholars.

Les Amis covered the launch of the prize in a two-part article in May 2021. Find the links below:

Beauford Delaney Research Grant - Part 1

Beauford Delaney Research Grant - Part 2

The winner of the first award was Vanina Géré of France. Her project was entitled "Hacking Control Devices": Contemporary African-American Political Digital Practices (and Beyond).

The winner of the 2022 award was Paul-Aimé William of Guyane. The title of his project was "James Amos Porter, Historiographie and Humanities of African-American Art".

On Thursday, February 16, 2023 I received an email from the Studies and Research Department at l'INHA announcing that the field is now open for applications for the 2023 edition of the grant:

Call for Applications (Web page is in French and in English).

This year's $20,000 award is reserved for established researchers.

Applications must be submitted by April 18, 2023.

Saturday, February 11, 2023

A Close(r) Look at Can Fire in the Park

On Thursday, February 9, 2023, the National Portrait Gallery hosted an online event called "In Dialogue: Smithsonian Objects and Social Justice."

It was one of a series of monthly events through which educators from the National Portrait Gallery partner with colleagues from across the Smithsonian to discuss how historical objects from their respective collections speak to today’s social justice issues.

This most recent dialogue featured Beauford's Can Fire in the Park, juxtaposing it with a haunting photographic self-portrait by LaToya Ruby Frazier. Both works were discussed with the intent to explore the following question:

"How does a community sustain well-being in the face of systemic inequity?"

The conversation began with an evaluation of Can Fire in the Park, painted during Beauford's New York years.

Can Fire in the Park
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

The moderators asked attendees to type in the chat what they saw in the painting.

Responses included "silhouetted figures," "warmth," "circles," "lots of vibrant colors," and "heavy, with layers of design."

The moderators then asked attendees to type how the painting made them feel.

Responses included "hopeful," "a bit of sadness," "isolation," and "inequity and solidarity at the same time."

The more comments I read, the more my view of Can Fire began to shift. I realized that I had never truly examined the elements of this celebrated work.

I took advantage of the link provided by the Smithsonian to look at an image of the work on its Website, and I spent a lot of time using the zoom function to look at parts of the painting I had only skimmed over before.

One of the comments referred to the possibility that the scene was set on a basketball court. I realized that I had never paid attention to the red lines on the ground behind the group huddled around the can.

Can Fire in the Park - detail: lines on ground
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

I looked at the fire that gives the painting its name. For the first time, I saw what appears to be a circular object at the top of the can, the edges of which Beauford traced in vivid blue. Though the body of the can is glowing, the fire seems to emerge from this orb-like structure.

Can Fire in the Park - detail: fire
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

I looked at the two human figures at the periphery of the group. Both have their arms crossed and both seem distant from the four people in the center. I always considered their arms to be folded because they were cold. But in looking at the painting through the lens of community, I now wonder if they are strangers to the people gathered around the can.

Another possibility is that they are standing guard so the people next to the fire can warm themselves undisturbed.

The person at the far left of the painting is well splattered with yellow. Perhaps light is shining on this figure, and perhaps the irregularly shaped caramel brown figure between this person and the short upward pointing arrow represents a shadow.

Can Fire in the Park - detail: man and arrow
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

I had always viewed the humans in the paintings as men. That night, for the first time, I thought that the person immediately to the right of the can might be a woman. The curved gold line atop the head (possibly a scarf or large ribbon) seems to wind its way down to the chest and torso of this person, and the curvature at the chest evokes a bustline. The broad strokes moving up and away from the face may represent a hair style - perhaps a large braid.

Can Fire in the Park - detail: woman (?)
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Because of the height of the person immediately to "her" right, this figure may represent a teen or a large child.

Can Fire in the Park - detail: teen (?)
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Then there is the figure standing at the left of the group of four people who are closest to the can. It is almost entirely outlined in yellow-gold.

Might this be a representation of Beauford himself?

Can Fire in the Park - detail: Beauford (?)
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Saturday, February 4, 2023

Beauford's Pastel Portrait of a Man Sold by Case Antiques

A couple of weeks ago, I announced that Beauford's Portrait of a Man would be auctioned by Case Antiques on January 28-29, 2023: 

Pastel Portrait of a Man to Be Auctioned by Case Antiques

Portrait of a Man
Pastel on wove paper
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
Image courtesy of Case Antiques

The auction produced a fantastic result — the work sold for $48,000, including buyer's premium (hammer price: $40,000), which far exceeded the estimated sales price of $10,000 - $12,000.

Sarah Campbell Drury, Vice President of Fine and Decorative Arts at Case Antiques, said the following about the sale:

"As you know, Delaney is one of the few African American Abstract Expressionists to hail from the South, and interest in his work has been steadily rising in recent years. We believe this is a record price for a Delaney portrait on paper. The buyer was a private collector bidding in the room." 

The Knoxville News Sentinel covered the auction with what might be described as exuberance. Journalist Devarrick Turner published an article on January 27 entitled "Place your bid! Here’s how you can own a Beauford Delaney original portrait," providing information about the work, instructions on how and where to bid, background information on Beauford and the future Delaney Museum at Beck, and images of additional Beauford Delaney works.

Turner followed up on the sale by publishing an article entitled "Beauford Delaney's 'Portrait of a Man' Shatters Auction Sale Price Expectations."

Knoxville's local ABC news affiliate, WATE, also published an in-depth article prior to the sale and updated its story with the auction result.