Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool at Studio Museum in Harlem

The story goes that African-American painter Barkley L. Hendricks began painting his life-size portraits of people of color after a post-collegiate trip to Europe in the '60s turned up museum after museum packed with nothing but portraits of whitey. With an eye on blaxploitation stereotypes, Pop, and American Realism, the Philadelphia-bred Hendricks made a big splash with his vibrant portraiture, and had his mainstream debut at the Whitney in 1971.

The Studio Museum in Harlem is now the second stop for Hendricks's first career retrospective. Called Birth of the Cool, the exhibit spans almost four decades of work, from his 1968 portrait of an African-American National Guard soldier to his stunning 2002 portrait of Fela Kuti (see above).

Reviewing the show for Time Out, T.J. Carlin writes, "I’m not sure if Barack Obama’s election had anything to do with it, but upon entering Birth of the Cool... I found myself marveling incredulously at the art world’s myopic view of its own recent history, and thinking, not for the first time, that here was a long-overdue show. It’s almost embarrassing that this survey of Hendricks’s work is the first big retrospective for a figurative painter who has clearly influenced—and who in many cases outshines—so many of his peers. Political questions aside, Hendricks needs to be recognized as a pioneer, and Birth of the Cool is an important initial step in that direction."

Birth of the Cool
will be at the Studio Museum in Harlem through March 15th. Here's a great video about the exhibit, featuring an interview with Hendricks, who since the '70s has been a professor at Connecticut College.

Email This Entry


Comments (6) [rss]

user-pic

Is "people of color" the proper PC now? black and african american are not? WTF?

"People of color" seems to mean all those who are not White (that is, appearing to be of European ancestry). It could include South and East Asians, American Indians, and so forth. "Black", "Afro-American", and "African-American" still refer to persons of apparent African ancestry. I suppose They (whoever They are) could use "Colored people" but that is an obsolete term for the descendants of the Negro slaves (a category for which we no longer have a word, even though they form a distinct cultural group in the U.S.).

As the notions of White and non-White become weaker and less significant, distinctions are proliferated among those bemused by the terms and concepts.

His inspiration for doing this project was because he saw portraits and portraits of white people. Now he does portrait after portrait of African Americans. Why couldn't it have just been portraits of all the different people of the world?

user-pic

"The story goes that African-American painter Barkley L. Hendricks began painting his life-size portraits of people of color after a post-collegiate trip to Europe in the '60s turned up museum after museum packed with nothing but portraits of whitey."

What a shock to find European museums full of portraits of... Europeans! (i.e. "whitey")

I had an Asian friend at Pratt that went to Africa and didn't see any portraits of Asian people there. Now he's painting portraits of Asian people.

Classy paintings I must say. Captures the essence of the typical Afro American colored Negroid rainbow coalition type person perfectly.

Post a comment (Comment Policy)

Tips

Get your daily dose of New York first thing in the morning from our weekday newsletter, now in beta.

About Gothamist

Gothamist is a website about New York. More

Editor: Jen Chung
Publisher: Jake Dobkin

Newsmap

newsmap.jpg

Contribute

Latest Tip:

I agree. Jake is making the Extra Extras more thick than say 3-4 bold ones.
[more]

Latest Photo:

Subscribe

Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from Gothamist.

All Our RSS

Follow us