Jerry Pinkney: Martin Luther King, Jr. and Great American Heroes

Exhibition Website

Jan 13 2018 - Apr 8 2018

Woodmere Art Museum

Philadelphia, PA

Jerry Pinkney (born 1939) is a master watercolorist and one of the most beloved artists in children’s literature. He has built a career creating paintings about legendary people and characters whose lives exemplify a journey of moral character and freedom of spirit. This intimate exhibition includes a recent portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and one of Pinkney’s famous paintings for a 1996 National Geographic article on the Underground Railroad by Charles Blockson, founder and curator emeritus of the Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection, Temple University Libraries. This exhibition offers a snapshot of a larger, thematic exhibition Woodmere is planning for 2019.

Pinkney grew up in Germantown and studied at the Philadelphia College of Art (now the University of the Arts). He has illustrated more than one hundred books and in 2010 received a Caldecott Medal for The Lion and the Mouse. Pinkney was honored by the Society of Illustrators with a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2006 and a Hall of Fame induction in 2011; and was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2012. He has received two lifetime achievement awards: 2016 Laura Ingalls Wilder Award, for making “a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children;” and the Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement, recognizing books that “explore cultural and ethnic identity” with “insight, skill and distinctive style.”

Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website

  • Works on Paper
  • American
  • Portrait
  • Jerry Pinkney

Exhibition Venues & Dates