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CHARLES WHITE | Ye Shall Inherit the Earth
Estimate
500,000 - 700,000 USD
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Description
- Charles White
- Ye Shall Inherit the Earth
- signed and dated '53
- charcoal on illustration board
- 39 by 26 in. 99.1 by 66 cm.
Provenance
ACA Galleries, New York
Laurence Roberts, California (acquired from the above in 1955)
Private Collection, New York (acquired in 2003)
Acquired by the present owner from the above in 2007
Laurence Roberts, California (acquired from the above in 1955)
Private Collection, New York (acquired in 2003)
Acquired by the present owner from the above in 2007
Exhibited
New York, ACA Galleries, Charles White: Recent Paintings, February 1953, no. 2
Washington, D.C., The Gallery of Art, College of Fine Arts, Howard University; Baltimore, The Carl Murray Fine Arts Center, Morgan State College; and Nashville, The Art Gallery Ballentine Hall, Fisk University, Charles White Drawings, September 1967 - January 1968, n.p. (text)
New York, ACA Galleries, Visions of America: A Black Perspective, January - March 2002, illustrated on the front cover of the brochure
Columbus, Columbus Museum of Art, Extended Loan, August 2007 - October 2009
Princeton, Princeton University Art Museum, Extended Loan, November 2009 - May 2018
Austin, Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas, Through the Eyes of Texas: Masterworks from Alumni Collections, February - May 2013, p. 162, illustrated in color
Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago; New York, The Museum of Modern Art; and Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Charles White: A Retrospective, June 2018 - June 2019, pp. 79, 81, 126, and 199 (text), and p. 112, no. 48, illustrated in color
Washington, D.C., The Gallery of Art, College of Fine Arts, Howard University; Baltimore, The Carl Murray Fine Arts Center, Morgan State College; and Nashville, The Art Gallery Ballentine Hall, Fisk University, Charles White Drawings, September 1967 - January 1968, n.p. (text)
New York, ACA Galleries, Visions of America: A Black Perspective, January - March 2002, illustrated on the front cover of the brochure
Columbus, Columbus Museum of Art, Extended Loan, August 2007 - October 2009
Princeton, Princeton University Art Museum, Extended Loan, November 2009 - May 2018
Austin, Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas, Through the Eyes of Texas: Masterworks from Alumni Collections, February - May 2013, p. 162, illustrated in color
Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago; New York, The Museum of Modern Art; and Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Charles White: A Retrospective, June 2018 - June 2019, pp. 79, 81, 126, and 199 (text), and p. 112, no. 48, illustrated in color
Literature
J.M.T., "Charles White, Pictures on Exhibit," February 1953 (text)
Harold Zilberg, "Charles White's Exhibit: A Warm Tribute to Negro People's Struggle," Daily Worker, February 19, 1953, p. 7 (text)
John Pittman, "The Art of Charles White: He Combats the Racists' Ideas," The Worker, March 1, 1953, p. 14 (text)
"Charles White: Ein Kunstler Amerikas," Verlag d. Kunst, 1955, illustrated
Harry Belafonte, James Porter, and Benjamin Horowitz, Images of Dignity: The Drawings of Charles White, Los Angeles, 1967, p. 60, illustrated (as Guardian)
Romare Bearden and Harry Henderson, A History of African-American Artists: From 1792 to the Present, New York, 1993, p. 412, illustrated, p. 539 (text)
Andrea D. Barnwell, Charles White, Rohnert Park, California, 2002, p. 56 (text), p. 57, no. 20, illustrated, p. 90 (text), and illustrated in color on the front cover
Jeanne Claire van Ryzin, "Blanton Turns to Alumni for Surprising Exhibition," Austin American-Statesman, March 17, 2013, p. D3, illustrated
Don Bacigalupi, Collette Crossman, and Annette DiMeo Carlozzi, "Works in Conversation," Alcalde, March - April 2013, n.p., illustrated
"Through the Eyes of Texas: Masterworks from Alumni Collections," Articulate, Spring/Summer 2013, p. 5, illustrated in color
Stephen F. Eisman, "Charles White: Art Institute of Chicago," Art in America, October 2018, p. 118 (text)
Harold Zilberg, "Charles White's Exhibit: A Warm Tribute to Negro People's Struggle," Daily Worker, February 19, 1953, p. 7 (text)
John Pittman, "The Art of Charles White: He Combats the Racists' Ideas," The Worker, March 1, 1953, p. 14 (text)
"Charles White: Ein Kunstler Amerikas," Verlag d. Kunst, 1955, illustrated
Harry Belafonte, James Porter, and Benjamin Horowitz, Images of Dignity: The Drawings of Charles White, Los Angeles, 1967, p. 60, illustrated (as Guardian)
Romare Bearden and Harry Henderson, A History of African-American Artists: From 1792 to the Present, New York, 1993, p. 412, illustrated, p. 539 (text)
Andrea D. Barnwell, Charles White, Rohnert Park, California, 2002, p. 56 (text), p. 57, no. 20, illustrated, p. 90 (text), and illustrated in color on the front cover
Jeanne Claire van Ryzin, "Blanton Turns to Alumni for Surprising Exhibition," Austin American-Statesman, March 17, 2013, p. D3, illustrated
Don Bacigalupi, Collette Crossman, and Annette DiMeo Carlozzi, "Works in Conversation," Alcalde, March - April 2013, n.p., illustrated
"Through the Eyes of Texas: Masterworks from Alumni Collections," Articulate, Spring/Summer 2013, p. 5, illustrated in color
Stephen F. Eisman, "Charles White: Art Institute of Chicago," Art in America, October 2018, p. 118 (text)
Catalogue Note
Maternal and tender, heroic and harrowing, Charles White’s beautiful Ye Shall Inherit the Earth from 1953 is a paradigmatic example of the artist’s iconic, socially committed output. Mining historical texts, contemporary publications, and sociological research, White demonstrated throughout his career an intense fascination with history and its impact on present day lives, particularly those of African-Americans in the early and mid-twentieth century. Alongside artistic peers including Aaron Douglas and Jacob Lawrence, White sought to recontextualize the significant role that African-Americans have played in the development of the United States. Created at a time when Abstract Expressionism had begun to take hold in America, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth exemplifies White’s groundbreaking use of figuration to create conversation around social issues of his day. The present work was recently included in the artist’s retrospective, which travelled to the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Modern Art in New York and Los Angeles County Museum of Art; further testament to the significance of the present work, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth was selected as the front cover image of the seminal 2002 monograph, Charles White. Within White’s extraordinary output, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth is an exceptionally poignant embodiment of the artist’s championing of civil rights causes and, in particular, black feminist causes. Perhaps the ultimate embodiment of White’s dedication to these aims, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth represents the figure of Rosa Lee Ingram, an African-American woman who, in the late 1940s, became the subject of one of the most explosive capital punishment cases in American history – a key moment in the history of civil rights activism. In 1947, Ingram, a widowed mother of fourteen, and two of her sons were accused of killing their neighbor, a white sharecropper, after enduring years of his harassment and abuse. Although all three were initially sentenced to death, the public outcry was so immediate and vigorous that the three sentences were commuted to life imprisonment. The continued protest against the incarceration of the Ingrams became a central catalyst for African-American women across the political spectrum and served as a rallying cry and key cause for such groups as the Women’s Committee for Equal Justice and the Sojourners for Truth and Justice. In 1954, following years of continued widespread protest against the Ingrams’ imprisonment, the Women’s Committee for Equal Justice organized a letter writing campaign centered on the image of the present work. Timed to coincide with Mother’s Day, two sets of postcards were sent: one, featuring a photograph of Ingram and her sons, was sent to the Georgia governor to demand their release, while the other, illustrating Ye Shall Inherit the Earth, was sent to Ingram, assuring her of the continued efforts being made on her behalf. Selecting his title from the well-known Biblical verse, White chose these words to underscore Ingram as a potent symbol not only for marginalized African-Americans seeking civil reform, but also for the plight of women within a male-dominated society. Although it would be another five years of fervent campaigning before Ingram and her sons were released, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth is powerfully emblematic of White’s dedication to the civil rights movement of the mid-twentieth century.
Underscoring the significance of the work, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth was featured as the main image in a portfolio White published in 1953 titled Six Drawings; at the time, this portfolio was moderately priced so as to be accessible to a wide audience. White's desire to make his art more attainable was a concern shared by other artists of the era and attests to their determination to have their art brought to those sidelined by steep gallery prices and exclusive museum exhibitions. Testament to the success of this portfolio, White later learned that a small group of workers in Alabama combined their savings to purchase Six Drawings, and agreed to share the pictures among themselves - a beautifully touching conclusion to the creation of this important portfolio.
Gazing out at the audience with a quiet dignity, White’s totemic figure clutches her child to her breast, her left hand draped protectively over his head. While her pose suggests the statuesque solemnity of a Madonna, the figure is rendered in soft and tender shades of charcoal, allowing sinuous lines, gentle highlights, and the smooth grisaille palette to imbue the work with a quiet and restrained elegance. Her nondescript hat and clothing replace the Virgin Mary’s traditional lapis garb, positioning her in the contemporary agricultural setting of 1950s America. Half-swaddled, her cherubic infant leans against her breast, safely enclosed within her caring grasp. When the present work was exhibited in 1953 at ACA Galleries, Harold Zilberg wrote of its emotive power: “…a mother stands holding her child, and as she looks out of the picture with a determined steady gaze, seems plainly to be saying, ‘We are going to change this world and make it a better place for our children to live in.’” (Harold Zilberg, “Charles White’s Exhibit: A Warm Tribute to Negro People’s Struggle,” Daily Worker, February 19, 1953, p. 7)
Exemplified within the present work, White’s distinctive approach to portraiture communicates universal human themes while simultaneously exploring intensely personalized narratives, ultimately creating a body of work that continues to resonate deeply today. His contribution to the course of twentieth-century art history cannot be understated, not only as a supremely talented artist and social historian, but also as a mentor and teacher to some of today’s best-known artists. In the preface of the exhibition catalogue for Charles White: A Retrospective, former student Kerry James Marshall writes of his beloved teacher at the Otis Art Institute of Los Angeles County: “The labor, the work, in Charlie’s drawings is palpable. One can follow the process through his technique and understand exactly how the image came to be on the page or the canvas. His most accomplished drawings achieve true perfection. The effect is dazzling, efficient, and never extravagant. An atmosphere of stillness and quietude envelops the space in and around the work. I can’t help remembering a Shaker motto I read somewhere that governs their sense of piety and discipline: ‘Hands to work, hearts to God.’ The terms art and work gain embodied meaning in the best of his pictures.” (Kerry James Marshall, “A Black Artist Named White,” in Exh. Cat., Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago (and travelling), Charles White: A Retrospective, 2018, p. 19)
Underscoring the significance of the work, Ye Shall Inherit the Earth was featured as the main image in a portfolio White published in 1953 titled Six Drawings; at the time, this portfolio was moderately priced so as to be accessible to a wide audience. White's desire to make his art more attainable was a concern shared by other artists of the era and attests to their determination to have their art brought to those sidelined by steep gallery prices and exclusive museum exhibitions. Testament to the success of this portfolio, White later learned that a small group of workers in Alabama combined their savings to purchase Six Drawings, and agreed to share the pictures among themselves - a beautifully touching conclusion to the creation of this important portfolio.
Gazing out at the audience with a quiet dignity, White’s totemic figure clutches her child to her breast, her left hand draped protectively over his head. While her pose suggests the statuesque solemnity of a Madonna, the figure is rendered in soft and tender shades of charcoal, allowing sinuous lines, gentle highlights, and the smooth grisaille palette to imbue the work with a quiet and restrained elegance. Her nondescript hat and clothing replace the Virgin Mary’s traditional lapis garb, positioning her in the contemporary agricultural setting of 1950s America. Half-swaddled, her cherubic infant leans against her breast, safely enclosed within her caring grasp. When the present work was exhibited in 1953 at ACA Galleries, Harold Zilberg wrote of its emotive power: “…a mother stands holding her child, and as she looks out of the picture with a determined steady gaze, seems plainly to be saying, ‘We are going to change this world and make it a better place for our children to live in.’” (Harold Zilberg, “Charles White’s Exhibit: A Warm Tribute to Negro People’s Struggle,” Daily Worker, February 19, 1953, p. 7)
Exemplified within the present work, White’s distinctive approach to portraiture communicates universal human themes while simultaneously exploring intensely personalized narratives, ultimately creating a body of work that continues to resonate deeply today. His contribution to the course of twentieth-century art history cannot be understated, not only as a supremely talented artist and social historian, but also as a mentor and teacher to some of today’s best-known artists. In the preface of the exhibition catalogue for Charles White: A Retrospective, former student Kerry James Marshall writes of his beloved teacher at the Otis Art Institute of Los Angeles County: “The labor, the work, in Charlie’s drawings is palpable. One can follow the process through his technique and understand exactly how the image came to be on the page or the canvas. His most accomplished drawings achieve true perfection. The effect is dazzling, efficient, and never extravagant. An atmosphere of stillness and quietude envelops the space in and around the work. I can’t help remembering a Shaker motto I read somewhere that governs their sense of piety and discipline: ‘Hands to work, hearts to God.’ The terms art and work gain embodied meaning in the best of his pictures.” (Kerry James Marshall, “A Black Artist Named White,” in Exh. Cat., Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago (and travelling), Charles White: A Retrospective, 2018, p. 19)