Object Details
Artist
Paul M. Feinberg, born 1942
Sitter
Sam Gilliam, 30 Nov 1933 - 25 Jun 2022
Exhibition Label
Born Tupelo, Mississippi
For six decades, Sam Gilliam expanded conceptions of what painting could be. This portrait shows the Washington, D.C.-based artist posed in front of large, stretched canvases hung against the wall, but Gilliam will be remembered for his “drape paintings.” Arranged in three-dimensional forms, these monumental, unstretched color-stained canvases blur the boundaries between painting and sculpture. Gilliam exhibited a selection of drape paintings to great acclaim at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in 1969, catapulting his national reputation. Three years later, he became the first Black artist to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale.
Although Gilliam’s career took off amidst the civil rights movement and Vietnam War protests, his work rarely addressed political themes overtly. And yet, Gilliam observed in a 2018 interview that “the expressive act of making a mark and hanging it in space is always political. My work is as political as it is formal.”
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Paul M. Feinberg
Date
1969 (printed 2012)
Object number
NPG.2013.48
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Copyright
© Paul M. Feinberg
Type
Photograph
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image: 2 × 33.1 cm (13/16 × 13 1/16")
Sheet: 27.7 × 35.5 cm (10 7/8 × 14")
Place
United States\District of Columbia
See more items in
National Portrait Gallery Collection
Location
Currently not on view
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Topic
Artwork\Painting
Costume\Smock
Sam Gilliam: Arts and Culture\Visual Arts\Artist
Sam Gilliam: Male
Portrait
Link to Original Record
Record ID
npg_NPG.2013.48