Quarry by Edward Loper

Oil painting of stormy town landscape

Did you know the US government once actually paid artists to work? During the Great Depression, the Works Progress Administration helped launch the career of Edward L. Loper, a prominent artist from Wilmington, Delaware.

We’ll find out how his lifelong curiosity, study, and teaching built a successful career lasting more than 60 years.

“Quarry” by Edward Loper, American, c. 1937, Corcoran Collection (The Evans-Tibbs Collection, Gift of Thurlow Evans Tibbs, Jr.)

“Chair” is one of Loper’s beautiful illustrations for the Index of American Design. You can see more on the American Drawings page on the Gallery’s site. The Index is listed in the sidebar. You can get a version to zoom and pan around in here.

Color illustration of an antique dining chair
“Chair” by Edward Loper, American, c. 1937, Index of American Design

SHOW NOTES  (TRANSCRIPT)

“A Long Look” theme is “Ascension” by Ron Gelinas youtu.be/jGEdNSNkZoo

Episode theme is “Night on the Docks – Sax” by Kevin MacLeod.  Licensed under a CC-BY Creative Commons Attribution License.

Artwork Information
https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.176358.html

Gaudiano, N. (2009, Nov 19). Bidens’ New Home a Gallery for Delaware Art. Gannett News Service (PDF)

Retrieved from https://search-proquest-com.dclibrary.idm.oclc.org/docview/450231157?accountid=46320

Exhibition catalogs
The Art of Edward L. Loper, Sr: On the Path of the Masters, University Museums of the University of Delaware, 2007

Edw. L. Loper: From the Prism’s Edge, Delaware Art Museum, 1996.

Interviews
Oral history interview with Edward L. Loper, 1964 Mar. 26 

Edward Loper : African American Painter (Video)

Edward Loper: Prophet of Color (Video)

Autumn Drama by Alma Thomas

Black and white photo of Alma Thomas attending her exhibition opening.
Jack Whitten. Photograph of Alma Thomas at Whitney Museum of American Art exhibition opening, 1972. Alma Thomas papers, circa 1894-2001. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.

Click here to view “Autumn Drama” on the Gallery’s site. Clicking the image on their page will open a viewer that allows you to zoom in and pan around.

Talk about a second act! Alma Thomas was a longtime art teacher in Washington DC, who began her art career after 35 years of teaching. She took inspiration from nature, color theory, and the works of artists she met through her involvement in the DC arts scene. All of this developed into her unique, colorful style.

We’ll find out how she found success at age when most people have long since retired and achieved national recognition most artists dream of. And what she had in common with Henri Matisse!

The US National Arboretum was a big inspiration to Thomas and this gorgeous photo shows where she might have gotten her color palette for Autumn Drama!

The columns installation at the US National Arboretum
The columns at the US National Arboretum, photographed by DC Gardens, courtesy of the National Arboretum.

SHOW NOTES (TRANSCRIPT)

“A Long Look” theme is “Ascension” by Ron Gelinas youtu.be/jGEdNSNkZoo

Episode theme is “All About the Sun” by Quantum Jazz.

Autumn Drama
https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.195514.html

Alma Thomas information
https://www.nga.gov/features/african-american-artists.html

https://americanart.si.edu/artist/alma-thomas-4778

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alma_Thomas

Alma W. Thomas : A Retrospective of the Paintings, Fort Wayne Museum of Art, 1998
(online book, best viewed in browser)

Whitney Museum of American Art exhibition catalog

The Art of Color: The Subjective Experience and Objective Rationale of Color, Johannes Itten

Alma Thomas. Autobiographical writing by Alma Thomas on her Earth paintings, before 1978. Alma Thomas papers, circa 1894-2001. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.

National Arboretum in October photographed by DC Gardens, courtesy of the National Arboretum CC BY

Slow Art Day http://www.slowartday.com

Correcting the Canon: The Evans-Tibbs Collection

Black and white headshot of Thurlow Evans Tibbs Jr. He is a young black man with short hair, moustache and beard.
Thurlow Evans Tibbs, Jr. Photo courtesy of the Ubuntu Biography Project.

Welcome back to “A Long Look!” For the rest of the season, I’ll be presenting paintings from the Evans-Tibbs Collection, one of the most important collections of works by Black artists in America.

It was the mission of Thurlow Evans Tibbs Jr. to raise the profile of Black artists by collecting and exhibiting their work in his Washington DC gallery from the 1970s through the early ’90s and by documenting their careers in an enormous archive. He inherited his love of art from his grandmother, known as Madam Evanti, the first professional African American opera singer to perform internationally.

Joining me in this introductory episode is Tibbs scholar Sandy Bellamy, an adjunct art history professor at Howard University and manager of the Percent for Art Commissions program run by the Washington DC Department of General Services. Sandy takes us through the fascinating history of the collection, and the rich legacy of Black art scholarship born at Howard University decades earlier.

SHOW NOTES (TRANSCRIPT)

“A Long Look” theme is “Ascension” by Ron Gelinas youtu.be/jGEdNSNkZoo

Episode theme is “Opportunity Walks” by Kevin MacLeod.
https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4173-opportunity-walks
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 

Artwork information
https://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/special/american-art-evans-tibbs.html

https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/exhibitions/pdfs/2019/the-evans-tibbs-archive-of-african-american-art.pdf (PDF)

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1997/01/17/art-dealer-thurlow-evans-tibbs-jr-dies/fb689a7d-8032-4c9f-a325-b66dce0490fa/

Digitized Evans-Tibbs archive items
https://library.nga.gov/discovery/collectionDiscovery?vid=01NGA_INST:NGA&collectionId=8153325980004896

Slow Art Day http://www.slowartday.com

BOOKS MENTIONED
The New Negro, Alain Locke

Modern Negro Art, James Porter