“I
have always thought that new and different
is a product of creativity and not the objective.
Art is communication.”
Elizabeth Catlett
is a product of creativity and not the objective.
Art is communication.”
Elizabeth Catlett
For the African American sculptor, printmaker, educator
and social activist, Elizabeth
Catlett has used her art to promote the aspirations of those she called ‘my
people’; African Americans and Mexican working-class women.
As the New
York Times’ Karen Rosenberg reported her as saying “I have always wanted my art to service my people — to
reflect us, to relate to us, to stimulate us, to make us aware of our
potential.”
Raised by a widowed mother
and ex-slave grandparents in Washington DC, Catlett experiences underscored her
sense of injustice. From being arrested as a teenager for protesting against lynching
on the steps of the American Supreme Court to being refused admission to Pittsburgh’s
Carnegie Institute of Technology because of her color.
She subsequently obtained a BFA
from Howard University and her MFA from the University of Iowa. Upon graduation
she started her career as an arts educator and whilst teaching at Dillard University in New
Orleans in the early 1940’s she managed to sneak a group of art history
students into a Picasso exhibition at the white only Delgado Museum.
As
she told the Sculpture
Magazine “With this exhibition I had an opportunity to talk to these
students about what art is…I went up with them and they’re looking at a
rooster, and they’re saying, ‘That’s not a rooster’; I said, ‘Well, that’s not
the way a rooster looks, that’s the way Picasso feels about a rooster. In the
first place, we all know it’s not a rooster, it’s a painting’... I thought it
was horrible that these kids had never been to an art museum, and that’s one of
my purposes. I want to get black people into museums.”
In
1946 Catlett moved to Mexico on a Rosenwald Fund Fellowship and in 1962 became a
Mexican citizen. A decision predicated by being declared an “undesirable alien" by the US
State Department due to her arrest protesting with the 1958 Mexican rail worker’s
strike and her association with communists.
In
Mexico, Catlett worked with the Taller de Grafica Popular, an influential and
political group of printmakers and taught at the National School of Fine Arts
in Mexico City. Working within the disciplines of printmaking and sculpture Catlett
produced realistic and highly stylized two and three dimensional figurative
works that ranged from the tender to the confrontational.
About
her different approaches for each discipline Catlett says “Printmaking had to
do with the moment. I thought of sculpture as something more durable and
timeless, and I felt that it had to be more general in the idea that I was
trying to express. Something with emotion, and the relation between form and
emotion… Form was what interested
me more. With printmaking, I was trying to get a message across more, something
to think about.”
The exhibition Charlotte Collects Elizabeth Catlett: A Centennial
Celebration is on
show at North Carolina’s Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American
Arts+Culture until the 31st of December.
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