View allAll Photos Tagged StandOut

More of my tree images. I do enjoy the challenge of making these look good or at least interesting..

Standout purple agate semi precious bib necklace with intricate bead frames and black tie closure

Team GD takes in the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Bay.

NY Rail Series - 1993

 

Radcliffe Bailey (`968 - 2023)

________________________________

With Passion and Purpose

Gifts from the Collection of Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson

 

June 7 - October 5, 2025

Locations East Building, Mezzanine — Gallery 214

 

See standout works by Black artists from the past century, newly gifted to the Nation.

 

For over four decades, Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson have championed the work of Black artists. They have supported exhibitions and scholarship as they built a remarkable collection that spans 100 years of Black creativity in America.

 

This exhibition celebrates the recent and promised gifts of 175 works from the Thompsons to the National Gallery—the largest group of objects by Black artists to enter our collection at one time. Explore more than 60 paintings, sculpture, drawings, and prints organized in sections around themes of music and abstraction, figuration and portraiture, civil rights and social politics, as well as landscape and transcultural connections and influences.

 

Works range from a captivating portrait by Beauford Delaney and lyrical abstractions by Mildred Thompson to a towering allegorical woodcut by Alison Saar and an intricate sculpture of found objects by vanessa german. Enjoy works by renowned artists—Jacob Lawrence, Archibald Motley, and Kara Walker—and discover artists you may not yet know, such as Camille Billops, Vivian Browne, Moe Brooker, and Alonzo Davis.

 

www.nga.gov/exhibitions/passion-and-purpose

.

"In April of this year, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC announced that it received a substantial gift of more than one hundred seventy artworks by Black American artists from art collectors Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson. “The breadth of artistic achievement across media and styles in this transformative gift enriches the story of American art that we can share with our visitors,” Kaywin Feldman, director of the National Gallery of Art, stated in the press release. The National Gallery of Art collection includes one hundred sixty thousand artworks that span the history of Western art from the Middle Ages to the contemporary moment, but although the collection covers a huge period of time, its holdings are not as diverse as the people who live and work in the Western world. The Thompsons’ gift is the largest gift of Black art the museum has ever received, and because Western art is so heavily Eurocentric, the Thompsons’ gift is, indeed, “transformative”—and vital.

 

The exhibition With Passion and Purpose: Gifts from the Collection of Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson, on view at the museum until October 5, features sixty paintings and sculptures from the collection. The donation spans one hundred years and features works by well-known artists, including Jacob Lawrence and Kara Walker, and more obscure artists like Moe Booker and Alonzo Davis. The collection is diverse in style, subject matter, and genre, featuring representational portraits to abstract paintings.

 

The four galleries that make up With Passion and Purpose are curated by Kanitra Fletcher, associate curator of African American and Afro-Diasporic Art; Shelley Langdale, curator and head of the department of modern prints and drawings; Claudia Watts, research assistant; and Emily Wehby, curatorial assistant, all of the National Gallery of Art. Vibrant abstract works greet the viewer upon arrival, setting up for a dynamic exhibition of varied artistic styles and subjects. While many artworks express narratives about Black America, not all of them take on such an arduous task; others celebrate beauty and joy. Artworks like Mento, 1968 by Mavis Pusey and Untitled, 1971 by Daniel LaRue Johnson exude the transformative nature of the post-civil rights moment they were created in. Other artworks like Sweeping Beauty, 1997 by Alison Saar and New York Rail, 1993 by Radcliffe Bailey illustrate Black life by expressing narratives that speak to harsh historical realities.

 

Sweeping Beauty, a woodcut on Okawara Natural Paper, depicts the figure of a pregnant nude woman positioned upside down, rendered in yellow pigment against a red and black background. The play on the classic children’s story Sleeping Beauty is evident, but Saar subverts the stereotypical female figure who is required to be chaste and dainty. The bold colors defy misogynist desires for women to be demure. For Black women, being modest was not always a choice, as from the time African women stepped onto American soil in the 1600s, they were relegated to chattel, and poked, prodded, and examined as such. Saar’s artwork of the nude figure might be also reckoning with the reality that Black women for so long were domestics made to clean and sweep. In these roles, Black women were not respected for their full humanity, and they were often forced to succumb to unwanted advances from their enslavers and bosses. Saar’s artwork is layered: her depiction of a fertility goddess highlights the notion that Black women birthed a workforce, and the figure’s hair sweeping the floor alludes to domestic servitude.

 

About

Print

Features

Shop

Submit

Visual Art

0

With Passion and Purpose: Black Collectors Complicate Western Art Culture

on artessay

Shantay Robinson

 

Alison Saar

Sweeping Beauty,1997

3-color woodcut on Okawara Natural Paper

overall: 193.04 × 83.82 cm (76 × 33 in.)

National Gallery of Art, Promised Gift of Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson

© Alison Saar. Courtesy of L.A. Louver, Venice, CA

 

In April of this year, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC announced that it received a substantial gift of more than one hundred seventy artworks by Black American artists from art collectors Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson. “The breadth of artistic achievement across media and styles in this transformative gift enriches the story of American art that we can share with our visitors,” Kaywin Feldman, director of the National Gallery of Art, stated in the press release. The National Gallery of Art collection includes one hundred sixty thousand artworks that span the history of Western art from the Middle Ages to the contemporary moment, but although the collection covers a huge period of time, its holdings are not as diverse as the people who live and work in the Western world. The Thompsons’ gift is the largest gift of Black art the museum has ever received, and because Western art is so heavily Eurocentric, the Thompsons’ gift is, indeed, “transformative”—and vital.

 

The exhibition With Passion and Purpose: Gifts from the Collection of Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson, on view at the museum until October 5, features sixty paintings and sculptures from the collection. The donation spans one hundred years and features works by well-known artists, including Jacob Lawrence and Kara Walker, and more obscure artists like Moe Booker and Alonzo Davis. The collection is diverse in style, subject matter, and genre, featuring representational portraits to abstract paintings.

 

The four galleries that make up With Passion and Purpose are curated by Kanitra Fletcher, associate curator of African American and Afro-Diasporic Art; Shelley Langdale, curator and head of the department of modern prints and drawings; Claudia Watts, research assistant; and Emily Wehby, curatorial assistant, all of the National Gallery of Art. Vibrant abstract works greet the viewer upon arrival, setting up for a dynamic exhibition of varied artistic styles and subjects. While many artworks express narratives about Black America, not all of them take on such an arduous task; others celebrate beauty and joy. Artworks like Mento, 1968 by Mavis Pusey and Untitled, 1971 by Daniel LaRue Johnson exude the transformative nature of the post-civil rights moment they were created in. Other artworks like Sweeping Beauty, 1997 by Alison Saar and New York Rail, 1993 by Radcliffe Bailey illustrate Black life by expressing narratives that speak to harsh historical realities.

 

Sweeping Beauty, a woodcut on Okawara Natural Paper, depicts the figure of a pregnant nude woman positioned upside down, rendered in yellow pigment against a red and black background. The play on the classic children’s story Sleeping Beauty is evident, but Saar subverts the stereotypical female figure who is required to be chaste and dainty. The bold colors defy misogynist desires for women to be demure. For Black women, being modest was not always a choice, as from the time African women stepped onto American soil in the 1600s, they were relegated to chattel, and poked, prodded, and examined as such. Saar’s artwork of the nude figure might be also reckoning with the reality that Black women for so long were domestics made to clean and sweep. In these roles, Black women were not respected for their full humanity, and they were often forced to succumb to unwanted advances from their enslavers and bosses. Saar’s artwork is layered: her depiction of a fertility goddess highlights the notion that Black women birthed a workforce, and the figure’s hair sweeping the floor alludes to domestic servitude.

 

Radcliffe Bailey

NY Rail (Transportation), 1993

cut-and-pasted offset printed paper and painted paper, acrylic paint, and blue crayon on wove paper

sheet: 45.8 x 58.9 cm (18 1/16 x 23 3/16 in.)

National Gallery of Art, Gift of Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson

2023.145.14

 

Radcliffe Bailey, who passed away in 2023 and is known for telling Black American narratives through his artwork, is represented here by the six separate paintings that make up his NY Rail. Like Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series, this artwork depicts the migration of Black people from the south and the Caribbean to parts of the United States. For NY Rail (Transportation), Bailey uses an archival photograph of Black people boarding a train, overlayed with a grid of colorful acrylic paint and a depiction of tree limbs with leaves. In NY Rail (Boats Arriving), he paints three and a half row boats, with the word “Mississippi,” “Jamaica,” and “Cuba” written on the sides of them, telling where and how Black people migrated. The background is in coordination with the other paintings in the series, as they incorporate the orange, blue, yellow, and green painted horizontal stripes depicting water and the landscape. In other artworks, NY Rail (Bird of Death) and NY Rail (Death of Infant), the artist illustrates the unfortunate trials faced during the migration. Though optimism drove the migrants, they still faced challenges that led to death in Northern cities, from mob violence to unhealthy environments in ghettos.

 

Without the stewardship of Black art collectors from the beginning of the early twentieth century when Black art burgeoned due to the New Negro Movement, commonly known as the Harlem Renaissance, the preservation of Black art would not have happened, and the art would be lost. During the early twentieth century, instead of exhibiting in downtown New York museums and galleries, Black artists exhibited their work in libraries, churches, and private homes. In 1921, the 135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library in Harlem held its first exhibition by African American artists. The library became a focal point for the Harlem Renaissance. Today, the library is known as the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, after Arturo Alfonso Schomburg, who was fundamental to the movement and in 1926 contributed his collection of more than four thousand books to the library for $10,000 furnished by the Carnegie Corporation. Black American artists were excluded from the art establishment largely until the mid to late twentieth century when postmodern conceptual art started to become popular. Because of this exclusion, museum collections around the country lack art that represents historical Black narratives. But today, museums are beginning to acquire art that fills the historical gaps in their collections through the generosity of collectors like the Thompsons, University of Georgia emeritus trustees, who have been collecting art since 1980. In 2011, they donated one hundred artworks to the Georgia Museum of Art, and in 2008, they gifted thirty nine artworks to the David C. Driskell Center at the University of Maryland, College Park. Collectors Walter O. and Linda Evans, who hold one of the largest collections of Black art, gifted the Telfair Museums thirty artworks; Seteria and Najee Dorsey, founders of Black Art in America, gifted the Columbus Museum fifteen artworks; and Constance E. Clayton, an educator and civic leader who collected Black art over fifty years, gifted the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art more than seventy artworks.

 

Without Black art collectors, so much of the artwork by Black artists would be forgotten. With the loss of the physical art, the impalpable sensibilities of Black life throughout varied stages of history would not be preserved. Black collectors have cared for their collections and also contributed to the dissemination of the art and ideas through gifts to institutions that benefit from the inclusion of Black history. These Black collectors who steward Black art are making judgments on what should be preserved in a field that is dominated by western culture’s Eurocentric gaze. And though Black collectors have gifted historically Black institutions, including Clark Atlanta University, Hampton Unviersity, and Howard University, with artworks throughout African American art’s history, it is notable that the Thompsons are Black collectors making a profound contribution to one of the most highly regarded collections in the United States—the National Gallery of Art.

 

Shantay Robinson, educator and art writer, lives in Northern Virginia. Her work has appeared regularly in ARTnews, Smithsonian Magazine, Black Art in America, and other notable publications where she primarily writes about Black Art. She holds a PhD in Writing and Rhetoric from George Mason University."

 

hopkinsreview.com/features/with-passion-and-purpose-shant...

Taking in Glasgow Climbing Centre, two of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games venues - the Emirates Arena and Tollcross International Swimming Pool. Joining us today are Scott Cunningham and his guide dog, Milo.

Like someone in a spotlight, this fish (a salmon?) stood out. It happened to pass through the "warmer" lights from the hall outside the glass wall. At the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach (also known as the Long Beach Aquarium).

 

Taken and originally posted in 2010.

Taking in Glasgow Climbing Centre, two of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games venues - the Emirates Arena and Tollcross International Swimming Pool. Joining us today are Scott Cunningham and his guide dog, Milo.

A 3D (stereo) crosseye view.

 

TO SEE THIS IN 3D, there's a tutorial here:

 

neil.creek.name/blog/2008/02/28/how-to-see-3d-photos/

 

This mysterious Gothic stone pillar at the edge of Woodlawn Cemetery stands in stark contrast to the modern-looking community mausoleum built just behind it. According to the NY Times, there was once a "grand entrance" to the cemetery here at Jerome Avenue and 233rd Street. Perhaps this pillar was once part of that entrance, which was presumably demolished to make room for the mausoleum. Bolstering this theory are two facts: 1) an identical pillar is symmetrically located around the corner on the other side of the mausoleum, where the other end of the entrance would have been, and 2) parts of an existing entrance farther south on Jerome Avenue look very similar to these pillars.

Standout Irises in the Alzheimer's Garden at Monroe Community Hospital.

A standout amongst the most sacrosanct feeling that exist on the planet is love. It is an inclination that leaves butterflies in the stomach as well as acquires grins and bliss the life of the couple. In any case, with two individuals of various personas and distinctive attributes may experience diverse issues with time. These issues may identify with multifaceted nature in similarity, issues in affection life and some more. In any which way, these issues may destroy and undermine the relationship which you have worked for over long time. On the off chance that you need to escape from such inconveniences or need get arrangements, then crystal gazing is a definitive way out. Soothsaying being the most established type of craft of treating distinctive issues can be utilized to defeat diverse difficulties in the adoration life of the person.

 

A relationship can experience the ill effects of various issues, for example, untrustworthiness, cherish, relationship between families, joint family issues, question, work weight and some more. Relationship issue arrangements offered by the master are precise resolutions that depend on the broad information and comprehension of crystal gazing. Being a noticeable arrangement supplier, Sufi Salim Khan plans arrangements as indicated by the birth diagram of the twosome and recommend arrangements. These arrangements are either in type of mantras that are performed by guruji and the couple together and gemstones that should be worn to change the negative energies into positive energies and make a harmony between the planets of both the accomplices.

 

Connections are a critical piece of our lives and supporting them appropriately is principal for having a favored life. These issues can bring about incredible turmoil and worry in one's life and there are part of individuals who are having such issues today. Along these lines it is imperative to comprehend and handle such issues carefully. Relationship issues can emerge because of an assortment of reasons, for example, inconsistency, self image conflicts, absence of comprehension and so forth.

  

Sufi Salim Khan Ji

Contact us : +919314494178

Email us : sufisalimkhan786@gmail.com

getmylovebackbyprayer.com/

 

A blazing red leaf stands out among yellowish-orange maple leaves in Madison, WI.

Taking in Glasgow Climbing Centre, two of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games venues - the Emirates Arena and Tollcross International Swimming Pool. Joining us today are Scott Cunningham and his guide dog, Milo.

Guide Dogs Week 2014 #StandOut

See samsm.ch/standout/

 

Camera: Hasselblad 501C

Lens: Zeiss Planar CB 80mm f/2.8

Film: Ilford HP5+ @ 800

Developer: Kodak HC-110 (1+49, 11 mins)

Scanner: Epson V800

Cropping, levels and dust removal done in Darktable.

 

19105

Team GD takes in the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Bay.

Team GD takes in the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Bay.

MUST BE VIEWED IN STEREO TO FULLY APPRECIATE!

A 3D (stereo) crosseye view.

TO SEE THIS IN 3D, there's a tutorial here:

 

www.neil.creek.name/blog/2008/02/28/how-to-see-3d-photos/

August 19, 2020. Boston, MA.

We Want to Go Back! But #OnlyWhenItsSafe!

Teachers protested at a socially distant standout to call on Governor Baker to take action in support of safe and healthy public schools and colleges. Supporters urged Governor Baker to:

1. Establish a uniform requirement for all districts to start the year with a comprehensive distance learning plan. Provide immediate support for access to the internet where it is lacking.

2. Set clear health and safety standards that must be met for the gradual return of in-person learning, including:

•Indoor air quality and ventilation in school buildings that meet appropriate regulatory and industry standards.

•Rapid COVID-19 testing that is accessible, routine, and free to students and staff.

•Community and public health benchmarks are established, met, and reported transparently.

   

Guide Dogs Week 2014 #StandOut

Market Street, Philadelphia PA, June 10th, Gay Pride Parade: a man in drag stands on Market street near the end of the parade.

 

Why is it we have a need to be unique? What is it with our drive, to seperate ourselves from each other.

 

It's natural really. We were made, in the image of God.

 

and God is the ultimate in unique.

 

But most people are going about uniqueness in the wrong way. They're trying to change something about their bodies, or their appearance, how they talk or the things they say. And that's how they try to make themselves unique. Call it: variations on the human theme.

 

In reality, being more like God, is what can make us truely unique.

 

That's what holy means actually.

 

It means other.

 

Extraordinary.

 

Altogether Unique.

 

That's Who God is.

 

And the only way to break the tired old mold of variations on the human theme, is to become less like humans, and more like God.

 

Like Jesus.

 

He's truely UNIQUE.

Si Se Puede Honorees Recognition Dinner, Latino Student Standouts

 

Photos by Katharine Kimball

www.KatharineKimball.com

1 2 ••• 38 39 41 43 44 ••• 79 80