The remarkable African American artist Dox Thrash has been frequently included in dictionaries, text books, and group exhibitions, but has been little studied until now. This stunning catalog features prints, drawings, and watercolors through which Thrash expressed a consciousness about the perception of blacks within the racist structures of both American society and Western art history. Working in a 'racial idiom' through these portraits, historical vignettes, and nudes, Thrash portrayed the American scene as he experienced it. Whether presenting a portrait of a strong, black individual, an unflinching image of racial violence, or a frank celebration of the black female body, Thrash was confronting cultural history through his art. His oeuvre can be seen as an interweaving of the human, the personal, the historical, and the political. Born in Griffin, Georgia in 1893, Dox Thrash compensated for his lack of formal education with a love of reading.After serving in the army during World War I, Thrash pursued his first formal art training in 1919 at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. After several years of traveling, during which he worked part-time jobs and drew portraits, he settled in Philadelphia where he remained until his death in 1965. At the height of the Depression, in 1936, Thrash joined the government-sponsored Graphic Arts Workshop of the Works Progress Administration in Philadelphia as a seasoned printmaker with a taste for experimentation. Philadelphia boasted the only Graphic Arts Division of the WPA devoted entirely to the development and production of fine art prints. While serving as head of the graphics division Thrash invented the carborundum printmaking process when he discovered that gritty carborundum crystals, normally employed to remove images from lithograph stones, could also be used to prepare copper plates for etching.The process was quickly adopted and adapted by other members of the WPA workshop, including a number of Thrash's younger African American colleagues, but the compelling imagery and rich chiaroscuro of Thrash's own carborundum prints have insured that it is his name that is most closely linked with this innovative method. Drawn from public and private collections, the book features a number of prints Thrash executed using the carborundum process. The selection also demonstrates his mastery of various other methods of printmaking in black and white and color, such as etching, aquatint, lithography, linoleum cut, as well as his accomplishments as a draughtsman and watercolorist. The works document the range of Thrash's compelling imagery, including scenes from his childhood in the rural south; hard times in the urban north in the 1930s; patriotic war work of the early 1940s; and poetic portraits of his community and its residents.The book focuses on the WPA period, as well as on the 1940s and 1950s, when Thrash's prints and drawings were shown in exhibitions in major cities across the United States, from Boston to San Francisco, as well as Mexico City. He was prominently featured in two landmark exhibitions in Chicago in the early 1940s: Art of the American Negro (1851-1940) during the American Negro Exposition in 1940, and We Too Look at America, the inaugural exhibition of Chicago's South Side Community Art Centre when it was formally opened by Eleanor Roosevelt in May, 1941.Subsequent solo exhibitions of Thrash's work were held in Philadelphia at the Pyramid Club, the Philadelphia Art Alliance, Lincoln University, and in Washington, D. C. at Howard University and at what is now known as the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.Included in the book are four insightful essays: 'Thrash and the 'Racial Idiom" by Kymberly N. Pinder of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; an account of the activities of the WPA Graphic Arts Workshop in Philadelphia by Cindy Medley-Buckner of the Baltimore Museum of Art; an exploration of the central role played by the Pyramid Club in African American cultural life in Philadelphia in the 1940s and 1950s by David Brigham of the Worcester Art Museum; and a biography of the artist focusing on his career as a printmaker by John Ittman, Curator of Prints at the Philadelphia Museum of art and the organizer of the exhibition.
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我通常对这种题材的书不太感冒,总觉得会过于严肃或者说教,但这次我被彻底“打脸”了。这本书的结构设计简直鬼斧神工,它不是一条直线叙事,而是像一张巨大的蜘蛛网,各种看似不相干的线索和人物,在不知不觉中被编织到了一起,直到某个关键时刻猛然收紧,揭示出隐藏在背后的巨大联系。这种精妙的布局,让我在阅读时必须时刻保持警惕,生怕错过任何一个细微的伏笔或暗示。更难得的是,作者在处理这些复杂线索时,并没有让逻辑链条变得生硬或牵强,一切过渡都显得那么自然而然,仿佛这一切本就该如此发生。当我终于拼凑出整个画卷的全貌时,那种“原来如此”的震撼感,是近年来阅读中最强烈的体验之一。书中的一些场景,比如关于记忆和遗忘的描绘,写得极富哲学意味,让我忍不住停下来思考,我们所“记得”的东西,究竟有多少是真实,又有多少是我们为了生存而构建的叙事?它不仅仅是一个故事,更像是一个关于认知和存在的迷宫,引人深入,流连忘返。
评分这本书的封面设计真是太吸引人了,那种复古的字体和略带斑驳的质感,一下子就把人带进了一种既熟悉又陌生的年代感里。我一开始还担心内容会比较沉闷或者晦涩,毕竟这种名字听起来就带着点年代的厚重感,但翻开扉页后的阅读体验完全超出了我的预期。作者的叙事节奏把握得非常精准,有时候快得像一阵风,让你喘不过气,感觉故事中的人物正在被命运的洪流裹挟着向前冲;而有时候又会突然慢下来,用极其细腻的笔触描摹一个微小的场景或者人物内心的一丝挣扎,这种张弛有度的叙事方式,让阅读过程充满了新鲜感和探索欲。我特别喜欢作者对环境和氛围的刻画,他似乎有一种魔力,能让那些静止的画面在脑海中活灵活现地动起来,无论是某个阴暗角落里飘散的烟草味,还是熙攘街道上混合着汗水和尘土的气息,都清晰可辨。读到一些关键转折点时,我甚至会忍不住停下来,合上书本,用力地呼吸几下,仿佛需要时间来消化那种情绪的冲击。这本书读下来,感觉就像是经历了一场酣畅淋漓的冒险,虽然过程跌宕起伏,但最终留下的回味却是悠长而令人深思的。它不是那种读完就忘的快餐文学,更像是一坛老酒,需要细细品味才能体会到其中蕴含的复杂层次和深刻意境。
评分老实说,我是在一个连绵阴雨的周末,抱着“随便翻翻”的心态开始读的,结果一发不可收拾,连晚饭都顾不上做。这本书最让我称道的是它对人性的洞察,那种近乎残酷的真实感,让人不得不直面生活中的灰色地带。书中塑造的那些人物,没有一个是脸谱化的“好人”或“坏蛋”,他们都有着深刻的矛盾和不为人知的软肋,他们的选择往往是在两难甚至多难的境地中做出的挣扎,充满了人性的复杂和挣扎的重量。有那么一两个配角的命运,尤其让我感到心痛,他们的退场处理得极其干净利落,却在我的心头留下了一块难以磨灭的阴影。作者的文字风格极其老辣,他很少用华丽的辞藻去堆砌情绪,而是通过精确的动作描写和简短的对话,将人物的内心活动展现得淋漓尽致。读到后半部分,我几乎可以感受到主角胸腔里那股郁结已久的气愤和不甘,那种无力改变现状却又不得不继续前行的悲凉感,被作者描绘得入木三分。这本书成功地做到了让你在情感上深深卷入,却又在理智上保持着一丝清醒的审视,探讨的主题很深,但阅读体验却丝毫不觉得枯燥。
评分说实话,这本书的开头有些慢热,我差点因为第一章的疏离感而放弃,但坚持读下去的奖励是巨大的。随着剧情的深入,你会发现作者埋设的那些看似不经意的日常片段,其实都是为了烘托后期那种命运的不可抗拒性。这本书的强大之处在于它将宏大的时代背景与极其微观的个体命运编织在了一起,没有把人物塑造成历史的匆匆过客,而是让他们成为历史洪流中一个个鲜活的、有血有肉的载体。我感受到了强烈的代入感,不是因为故事的情节多么贴近我的生活,而是因为人物在面对困境时的那种原始的、不加掩饰的求生欲和对尊严的维护,是超越时间和地域的普世情感。最后收尾的处理尤其高明,它没有给出一个圆满的句号,而是留了一个开放式的空间,让读者自己去思考,在那个世界观下,真正的“幸存”意味着什么。这让我合上书页后,久久不能平静,感觉自己不仅读了一个故事,更是被邀请参与了一场关于勇气、选择和代价的深刻哲学探讨。
评分这本书的语言风格,用“冷峻而克制”来形容可能最为贴切。它没有太多渲染性的描述,但每一个词语的选择都像是经过千锤百炼的,精准地卡在那个最合适的位置上,产生最大的冲击力。我尤其欣赏作者在构建冲突时所展现出的高超技巧——很多时候,最可怕的对峙并非是肢体上的,而是那种眼神交锋、沉默对峙中的暗流涌动。阅读过程中,我仿佛置身于一个没有温度的房间,空气中弥漫着某种紧张的电荷,随时可能爆发,但却又被某种看不见的力量死死压制着。这种阅读体验,更像是观看一部优秀的默片,演员的每一个微小表情都承载着巨大的信息量。我喜欢这种留白的处理方式,它迫使读者必须主动参与到故事的构建中去,用自己的想象力去填补那些未被言明的空白。对于那些喜欢深度挖掘文字背后含义的读者来说,这本书绝对是饕餮盛宴。它不喂给你现成的结论,而是给你最优质的原料,让你自己去烹饪出属于你的理解和感悟。
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