Showing 5 items related to Center for Inter-American Relations
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1973
Published by: Center for Inter-American Relations
Year published: 1973
Unpaginated.
Frank Bowling - Center for Inter-American Relations, 680 Park Avenue, New York, 28 November 1973 - 13 January 1974
Design: Leon Auerbach; Colour Photographs: Robert Scott; Printing: Editorial Arte/Caracas, Venezuela. Introduction: John Tancock - Director, Contemporary Art Department, Sotheby Parke Bernet; Biography. From the introduction: “After constant experimentation, Bowling has arrived at a stage where the solution can best be found in abstract terms. His search for the organic relationship between line and colour corresponds to his earlier endeavour and is no less difficult to achive, but by now he is sufficiently master of his craft to create paintings in which the most obvious signs of struggle seem to have disappeared. The fact that they have not only makes this group of paintings more remarkable.“
Born, 1935 - 1937 (probably 1936) in British Guiana (now Guyana) Caribbean/S. America
Solo show at Center for Inter-American Relations. 1973 - 1974
New York, United States of America
Solo show at Center for Inter-American Relations. 1973 - 1974
Date: 28 November, 1973 until 13 January, 1974
Organiser: Center for Inter-American Relations
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1973
Born, 1935 - 1937 (probably 1936) in British Guiana (now Guyana) Caribbean/S. America
New York, United States of America
New York, United States of America
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1968
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1973
Solo show at Center for Inter-American Relations. 1973 - 1974
Born, 1935 - 1937 (probably 1936) in British Guiana (now Guyana) Caribbean/S. America
Born, 1935
Born, 1924 in Spanish Town, Jamaica
Born, 1914 in Port-au-Prince
Born, 1898 in Pétion-Ville, Haiti. Died, 1973
Group show at Center for Inter-American Relations. 1968
Date: 10 October, 1968 until 27 October, 1968
Organiser: Center for Inter-American Relations
Artists of the Western Hemisphere | Art of Haiti and Jamaica, was a group exhibition held at the Art Gallery, Center for Inter-American Relations, 600 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y., October 10 - 27, 1968. It featured the following Haitian artists: Castera Bazile, Rigaud Benoit, Charlemagne Bien-Aime, Wilson Bigaud. Murat Brierre, Préfète Duffaut, Enguerrand Jean Gourgue, Hector Hyppolite, Jasmin Joseph, Peterson Laurent, Georges Liautaud, Philomé Obin, Sénèque Obin, Salnave Philippe Auguste, André Pierre, Louverture Poisson, Robert St. Brice, and Micius Stephane. This group of eighten Haoitian artis was supplemented with three Jamaican artists: Benjamin E Campbell, Wilfred Francis, and Kapo (Mallica Reynolds).
The accompanying catalogue featured an Introduction by Selden Rodman, who had been responsible for one of the pioneering books on Haitian art, Renaissance in Haiti: Popular Painters in the Black Republic, published by Pellegrini & Cudahy, New York, 1948. Rodman also wrote several other books on Haitian art as well as two books on the African American artist Horace Pippin (one written with Carole Cleaver). The Artists of the Western Hemisphere | Art of Haiti and Jamaica catalogue also featured a csecond introduction written by DeWitt Peters, who had died some two years earlier.
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1968
Born, 1935
Born, 1924 in Spanish Town, Jamaica
Born, 1908 in St. Marc
Born, 1914 in Port-au-Prince
Born, 1898 in Pétion-Ville, Haiti. Died, 1973
New York, United States of America
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1968
Published by: Center for Inter-American Relations
Year published: 1968
Unpaginated.
Small unpaginated catalogue for Artists of the Western Hemisphere | Art of Haiti and Jamaica, a group exhibition held at the Art Gallery, Center for Inter-American Relations, 600 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y., 10 - 27 October 1968. It featured the following Haitian artists: Castera Bazile, Rigaud Benoit, Charlemagne Bien-Aime, Wilson Bigaud. Murat Brierre, Préfète Duffaut, Enguerrand Jean Gourgue, Hector Hyppolite, Jasmin Joseph, Peterson Laurent, Georges Liautaud, Philomé Obin, Sénèque Obin, Salnave Philippe Auguste, André Pierre, Louverture Poisson, Robert St. Brice, and Micius Stephane. This group of eighteen Haitian artists was supplemented with three Jamaican artists: Benjamin E Campbell, Wilfred Francis, and Kapo (Mallica Reynolds).
This accompanying catalogue featured an Introduction by Selden Rodman, who had been responsible for one of the pioneering books on Haitian art, Renaissance in Haiti: Popular Painters in the Black Republic, published by Pellegrini & Cudahy, New York, 1948. Rodman also wrote several other books on Haitian art as well as two books on the African American artist Horace Pippin (one written with Carole Cleaver). The Artists of the Western Hemisphere | Art of Haiti and Jamaica catalogue also featured a second introduction written by DeWitt Peters, who had died some two years earlier. Also featured was a Foreward (sic) written by Stanton L. Catlin, Director, Art Gallery, Center for Inter-American Relations.
Contents as follows:
Foreward (sic) Stanton L Catlin
1 Introduction Selden Rodman
2 Introduction DeWitt Peters
Nine monochrome plates
Checklist
Biographies - Haitian Artists
Biographies - Jamaican Artists
Selected Bibliography
Born, 1923 in Jacmel, Haiti. Died, 1965
Born, 1931 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Born, 1923 in Jacmel
Born, 1894 in Port-au-Prince. Died, 1948
New York, United States of America