Walkin' Blues
Date2000
Label Text"Stranger Blues," a song recorded by Sweet Honey in the Rock (an African American female vocal group), inspired this sculpture. It recounts the saga of a woman who doesn't feel at home anywhere she goes and is constantly leaving because she has the "walkin' blues." Whitfield Lovell selected one of the historic photographs of African Americans that he collects from antique shops and flea markets to epitomize this unknown woman, sketching her haunting image on wallboards, not white canvas, to evoke a bygone era. Around her, the artist has created a "tableaux" that emphasizes her transient habits-an empty steamer trunk and suitcase wait for her to pack and move on.
Object number2000.217
Exhibition HistoryNew York, New York, DC Moore Gallery, "Whitfield Lovell: Recent Tableaux," October 18 - November 11, 2000, no. 5
Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "First Person Singular" May 31, 2001 - March 17, 2002
Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "Africa in America", December 18, 2004 - January 1, 2006
Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "Black Art II", November 21, 2008 - March 15, 2009
Published ReferencesLippard, Lucy. "The Art of Whitfield Lovell: Whispers from the Walls." Petaluma: Pomegranate Communications, Inc., 2003, p. 88, illus.Credit LineThe 1999 Maryatt Gala Fund
DimensionsPanel: 86 x 50 1/2 in. (218.4 x 128.3 cm); Trunk 1: 30 x 16 1/2 x 11 in.; Trunk 2: 41 1/2 x 22 x 21 in.
MediumCharcoal on wood and found objects
1965
Object number: 2014.26.10