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WHITFIELD LOVELL
WITH NEAL MIDDLE
SCHOOL STUDENTS


September 20 - October 28, 2001 | Durham
Art Guild | 120 Morris Street | Durham


Whitfield Lovell is a New York-based African American artist who explores and documents the lives of black men and women, primarily in the rural American South. Lovell's recent artwork-multipart installations incorporating portrait drawings on wood and numerous household objects, such as bottles, cooking vessels, lanterns, and chairs-began as autobiographical exploration using family photographs, many taken by his father. Inspired by studio portraits of his grandmother's relatives, Lovell soon began searching for studio photographs of other African Americans in thrift shops and at flea markets. These further informed his use of charcoal portraits as centerpieces for his art, which along with found objects create narratives about largely undocumented lives. At Neal Middle School, Lovell used more than two hundred old family photographs, primarily of African American and Latino families, which he collected from flea markets. The eighth-graders made several charcoal drawings based on photographs they chose and composed written pieces to accompany them. Working in small groups the students incorporated found objects-such as screen doors, old ironing boards, and flowers-into large installations that drew on their feelings about the photographs while evoking portions of their own memories.

3 ARTISTS