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Elizabeth Catlett papers addendum

 Collection
Identifier: 078-1

Scope and Contents

The Elizabeth Catlett papers addendum consists primarily of Catlett's professional correspondence (1959-2003) and items collected by her throughout her professional life as a sculptor, graphic artist, teacher, and political activist. The collection measures 12.5 linear feet and dates from 1942-2003, with the bulk of material dating from 1976-2000.

Correspondence in the collection is comprised mostly of letters received by Catlett from museums, galleries, and individuals concerning the sale or exhibition of her artwork. Family correspondence is located in a single folder. A full range of exhibition catalogs (1947-2000), both for Catlett's work and by other African American artists can be found in this addition. Articles and news clippings, as well as invitations, programs, conference materials, and publicity materials further document Catlett's work and activities. A small number of photographs are located in the collection, most of which are of Catlett’s artwork. Audiovisual materials include VHS videotapes that include lectures, interviews, and footage of Catlett in her studio.

Dates

  • Created: 1942-2003
  • Other: Majority of material found in 1976-2000
  • Other: Date acquired: 01/01/1987

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright to these papers has not been assigned to the Amistad Research Center. It is the responsibility of an author to secure permission for publication from the holder of the copyright to any material contained in this collection.

Biographical Note

Elizabeth Catlett, sculptor, printmaker, graphic artist, teacher, and political activist specialized in realistic art designed to preserve black cultural traditions. She was a fellow of the Julius Rosenwald Foundation and art educator in both the United States and Mexico.

Elizabeth Alice Catlett was born April 15, 1915, at Freedmen's Hospital in Washington D.C., and was the third child of Mary Carson Catlett and John Catlett. Her mother worked as a social worker and truant officer and her father was a teacher in the Washington D.C. public schools. Her father also served as a professor of mathematics at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and taught alongside Booker T. Washington and George Washington Carver.

In 1931, Catlett enrolled at Howard University in Washington D.C., where she majored in design and studied printmaking, drawing, and art history. At Howard, she studied under Lois M. Jones, James Herring, James Wells and James Porter. Following her studies at Howard, Catlett took a teaching job in Durham, North Carolina, and became involved in a struggle to win equitable pay for African American teachers. During this time she enrolled in the graduate school program at the University of Iowa to pursue a master's degree in art and majored in sculpture. Catlett roomed with author Margaret Walker and studied under painter Grant Wood. Wood encouraged her to work with wood and to depict subjects in which she could directly identify with. She took Wood's advice and worked on images of African American women, mothers, daughters, and children.

In 1940, Catlett became the first person to receive a Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of Iowa for sculpture. Her thesis piece, Mother and Child, a 36-inch high limestone sculpture, became a characteristic theme of her art. While studying ceramics at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1940, Catlett exhibited the Mother and Child sculpture at the Columbian Exposition, a national exhibition of African American art and won first prize. While in Chicago, Catlett roomed with Margaret Burroughs, a founder of the DuSable Museum and the South Side Community Center. The South Side Community Center was a place artists and writers, such as Margaret Walker, Margaret Burroughs, Katherine Dunham, and Charles Sebree would come together to discuss new ideas. Following her studies in Iowa and Illinois, Catlett became chair of the art department at Dillard University in New Orleans and taught drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking, and art history. An incident of discrimination profoundly affected Catlett's focus on art during her stay at Dillard. Catlett escorted her art class to see a retrospective exhibition of Picasso's paintings at the New Orleans Museum of Art. During this time the museum's entrance was through City Park; the park was closed to African Americans, which required the class to enter the museum directly from the bus.

In 1942, Catlett moved to New York City where she studied with French sculptor Ossip Zadkine and lithography at the Art Students League. In the summer of 1942, she began teaching sculpture at Hampton Institute in Virginia. While there, she met artist and art educator Viktor Lowenfield. Catlett went back to New York and joined the faculty of the George Washington Carver School in Harlem, New York. The students consisted of laborers and blue-collar workers and the curriculum was an experimental hybrid of continuing and alternative education, offering courses in popular and classical music, practical economics, literature, photography, and sculpture. Catlett would recreate these workers in a series of generalized studies in oil and graphic media executed between 1942 to 1946 in works such as War Worker, Pensive, Portrait, Red Cross Woman - Nurse and Black Worker.

The Julius Rosenwald Foundation awarded Catlett with a grant in 1946. Catlett decided to create a series of works dedicated to African American Women. The series would be entitled I Am the Negro Woman and conveyed the determination of African American women in the face of overwhelming odds.

Catlett traveled to Mexico in 1945, where she instantly fell in love with the country. In Mexico she studied terracotta sculpture with Francisco Zuniga, learning the Mexican way of building hollow ceramic sculpture at Escuela de Pintura y Escultura in Mexico City, and became involved in the Mexican government's campaign for literacy. Catlett returned to Mexico in 1947 and married painter and printmaker Francisco Mora. The couple had three sons Francisco Jr. born in 1947, Juan in 1949 and David in 1951. Catlett joined the Taller de Grafica Popular (People's Graphic Arts Workshop) of printmakers. The workshop's mission was to maintain the social and political ideals of the Mexican revolution. While at the workshop Catlett produced a series of linocuts of black labors, artist and farmers entitled, The Negro Woman.

In 1958 Catlett became director of the sculpture department at the National School of Fines Arts at National Autonomous University of Mexico and remained so until her retirement in 1976. Catlett became a Mexican citizen in 1962, and during the 1960s, she created art using variations on the theme of the dignified woman of great strength, physicality, and primitive grandeur reminiscent of African goddesses and queens.

The late 1960s and early 1970s were years of social protest and political activism. Catlett created her most polemical works, Black Unity, two mask-like faces in front of a clenched fist, and Homage to My Black Sisters, an abstracted standing female figure with raised right arm. She created the works Target and the Torture of Black Mothers, which allude to death, massacre, and dismemberment.

Elizabeth Catlett continued to work and exhibition her artwork into her later years. She passed away on April 2, 2012, in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Extent

12.50 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement Note

The papers have been arranged into four series: correspondence, family papers, collected items, oversize material and media.

Physical Access Requirements

Audiovisual materials stored offsite. Please contact Reference Desk of the Amistad Research Center for inquiries.

Source of Acquisition

Elizabeth Catlett

Method of Acquisition

Gift

Accruals and Additions

Multipe additions received between 1987 and 2003

Related Materials

In addition to the Elizabeth Catlett Papers and this addition, the Amistad Research Center also holds the papers of Francisco Mora, John Scott, and William Pajaud, as well as the records of Stella Jones Art Gallery in New Orleans, the National Conference of Artists, and the Julius Rosenwald Fund. Examples of Catlett's art are located in the Center's fine arts collection.

Processing Information

Processed November 2003-March 2004

Title
Elizabeth Catlett papers addendum
Author
Shannon Burrell
Date
07/24/2012
Description rules
Other Unmapped
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
eng

Repository Details

Part of the Amistad Research Center Repository

Contact:
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