Private: Purvis Young

Exhibition Website

Sep 12 2019 - Jan 26 2020

The exhibition Purvis Young presents for the first time the depth of the Purvis Young (American, 1943-2010) collection in the Tampa Museum of Art’s holdings. In 2004, the Rubell Family Foundation gifted 91 works by Young to the Museum, one of the largest donations of the artist’s work in the Southeast. Young, a self-taught artist, created thousands of assemblages with imagery of protesters, pregnant women, and warriors on wood remnants, cabinets, and doors. This exhibition explores the artist’s distinct iconography and reflects on Young’s experiences living and working in Overtown, Miami.​

Purvis Young is part of the exhibition series Ordinary/Extraordinary: Assemblage in Three Acts. The series simultaneously presents three discrete shows focused on works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Purvis Young, and a selection of 20th- and 21st-century Haitian Vodou flags. The use of found objects, such as discarded wood and textiles, formally links the exhibitions together. More importantly, historical and socio-economic narratives informed by the Afro-Caribbean Diaspora, the Black experience in America, as well as European artistic influences, unite the artists featured in the series. Although each is a stand-alone show, viewed together, the series explores provocative portrayals of race, identity, spirituality, survival, and hope in a range of assemblage objects and compositions.

Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website

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