Dyana Williams, Art Collector
Every wall and every corner of her house is a delightful
discovery and a treat for the eye: filled with an eclectic mix of
paintings, photography, sculptures, furniture, dolls, quilts... (and
the list goes on) in various styles by different artists, Dyana
Williams is a true collector, in all sense of the word.
Dyana started collecting art with a passion in the 1980s.Growing up in
a home where parents stressed culture, whether it was art, dance, music
or literature,she acquired a taste and propensity for art early on in
life. Her father was very interested in photography, so she learned to
appreciate images; her mother took her to the Metropolitan Museum of
art, Studio Museum in Harlem. With such background she always had an
appreciation for art,but it was in the mid-80s when she really started
collecting art; with maturity and acquisition of more information, came
a greater passion for collecting.
She first learned more about art and collecting through October Gallery,
and started meeting the current and important artists, particularly the
artists based in Philadelphia: Barbara Bullock, Samuel Byrd, Richard
Watson, and Tom McKinney, to name a few. As Dyana was a radio Disc
Jockey at the time, as a presenter of culture she was able to move in
that artist circle; in fact she hosted the Philadelphia International
Art Expo in the beginning.
Many of the pieces in her collection have themes of the female or
music, as she works in the music industry, but she feels it is critical
to diversify her collection. She owns pieces by the masters such as
Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Elizabeth Catlett, as well as
pieces by unknown artists. She buys art out of several different
motivations: images that are interesting and appealing to her, images
that she sees intrinsic values in, images to diversify her
collection,and with some practicality, images with investment values.
“You identify with pieces that remind you of yourself; initially when I
was buying art I bought pieces that resonated with the recollection of
my life, memories of my experience; as tastes and interests refined I
started buying other types,” says Dyana. To diversify her collection
she started collecting hand-painted furniture, ceramics, photographs.
“It ’s important to diversify a collection, so that it’s not too much
of any one thing.” Paul Jones, collector of great reputation who has
recently donated his magnificent collection of more than 1,500 works to
the University of Delaware, has been a mentor to her, and has taught
her the importance of diversity in a collection. Dyana serves as a
member of the Paul Jones collection advisory board. The advisory board
is handpicked by Paul Jones himself. Dyana, often referred to as
“Ambassador of African American Music,” traveling all over the world to
meet with governors and presidents to promote the value and importance
of African American music, is a perfect person to get the word out and
generate a buzz about the collection. “I ’m on a mission,” says Dyana.
She curates exhibitions and pitches the Jones collection so that the
pieces in the collection can be loaned out to various exhibitions to be
viewed by a wider public.
Many of her favorite pieces are
located in her New Orleans residence, but among the pieces at her
Philadelphia home she picks out the Elizabeth Catlett lithograph as her
favorite, the reason being “because it was found,lost and then found.”
It was her first and only Catlett piece, and during one of her children
’s illness the piece was misplaced. She was upset but let it go with
much regret - only to find it again six months later, thankfully
undamaged.“They [the paintings] are like my kids though, it’s hard to
say which one is my favorite,” says Dyana, laughing. “Also, favorites
change, with different interests in different periods of your life.”
Dyana ’s recent interests have been quilts, textile and fabric. She
also likes glass pieces and collects dolls as well. Her favorite dolls,
also kept in her New Orleans home, are handmade rag dolls, like the old
mammy dolls. “I saw one at an antique shop in the French Quarters of
New Orleans, and they caught my fancy...before I knew it there were 30,
40 of them in my collection.”
The dolls are one of a kind, old dolls that are so fragile one almost
can ’t touch them. “Once there were molds on my dolls,and I cried as if
they were living human beings,” says Dyana. Barbara Whitman from the
Philadelphia Doll Museum advised her to use hot water with soap and
vinegar to remove the molds.Some old ones could not be restored, and
attached as Dyana was to the dolls she could not throw them away but
washed them and put them in a closet. Besides the dolls, she also
collects first edition books, particularly from the Harlem Renaissance,
and also memorabilia - she is a collector, who just loves to collect.
“It is a passion that has developed into something that I derive great
pleasure from, but other people appear to as well, including my family
who were critical at one point,” says Dyana. Her family started to
worry about her when her obsession with buying art was slightly getting
out of control, when she started putting art in garages and storages.
“I was sneaking art into the house after midnight and that’s when I
realized I had to slow my obsession down a little bit.”
She hasn ’t stopped collecting, however, and she knows her collection
is a tangible asset that she can leave for her children; “an asset that
I pray that they would enjoy as much as I did,and remind them of my joy
of supporting the creative people such as I have...” she adds, "and
celebrating our culture,and also celebrating the American
heritage,because these are black artists, but they are also American
artists.”
Dyana defines her collection as an American collection, but with a lot
of focus on African American art. She is Puerto Rican and African
American, so she wants to collect more of Latino art, and Caribbean and
Haitian art as well, also in line with her goal of diversifying the
collection. “When you are a collector, you love art, but you tend to
focus your interest in one area, and I ’m no different from any other
collector. It just happened to be African American art because that is
my culture and heritage. ”Dyana expressed her concern about how
underrated and under-represented African American art is in “American
Art, ”which tends to include just white artists. However, that does not
mean she boycotts art by white artists. One of her favorite glass piece
is by an white artist: “that didn't matter to me, I just loved the
piece. I’m glad I have that piece in my collection.I ’m an Equal
Opportunity Collector,” she laughs.
“I will spend the rest of my life promoting African American art,
culture, music, dance. It ’s who I am and what I believe in. I love the
creativity that comes from our communties, specifically the communities
of color,” says Dyana. With the amazing work of preservation and
promotion she is doing already in behalf of African American culture,
with such energy and enthusiasm, it is only exciting to imagine what
her next step might be.
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