BLACK ART NEWS TODAY

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Featured Artists
Amachi Omenihu
Angel Latorre
Andrew Turner
African Mask
In Basquiat's Shadow: The Spook that Opened the Door
Who are Glenda and Milton Boone?
Frank Frazier:
Past, Present and Future
Louis Jefferson III
Mark G and the
Nude Expo
Paula Whaley
KBM Kreatrix
Leroy X. Edney
J. W. McPhail
African Heritage Collection
Cheryl Willis
Cicely Tyson
Frank Frazier
Laurie Cooper
Adrienne Mills
Sheats Repousse
Carolyn L. Mazloomi
Frank Morrison
Phyllis Stephens
Jega International
Jacob Arts
Michele Wood
Eugene Thomas
Justin Bua
Ernie Barnes
Annie Lee
Redfern Fine Art
Woodrow Nash
Faith Ringgold
Mari Hall
Burnett Curtis Grayson III
CJ Fletcher
Karen Y. Buster
Kelvin W. Henderson
LaShun Beal
Romare Bearden
Sidney Carter
Tom Feelings
Twin Hicks
turner

Andrew Turner

The late artist Andrew Turner was born in l944 in Chester, Pennsylvania.  He was a Temple University Tyler School of Art graduate  who has been widely acclaimed, with many solo and group exhibitions nationally and internationally.  As an ant teacher, Turner taught in grades K-1 2 in the Chester Public Schools System and in correctional centers.

   "My paintings combine the drama inherent in seventeenth century Dutch painting with the brush work and the economy of the Impressionists. However, I look to the jazz idiom more so than to other contemporary visual artists for guidance and inspiration.  I tend to measure the success of my pieces by how they stand up technically, emotionally and innovatively to a Coltrane solo or whether I've captured the spirit of the occasion, a la Ellington.  The subject matter, sometimes nostalgic recollections of my days as a young tough, covers a myriad of common folk activities.  The setting usually my native Chester, is a beehive of creative stimulation or a deteriorating ghetto depending on my state of mind. At the very least, hopefully, these vignettes of experience will help to provide insight into some African American lifestyles and serve as an inspiration to my students and others to continue the legacy of African American participation in the arts."