Historic West Woodlawn

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Place of Pioneers

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A Wonderful Walkable Village

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Historic West Woodlawn ~ Place of Pioneers ~ A Wonderful Walkable Village ~

Richard Howard Hunt (September 12, 1935 – December 16, 2023) was an American artist and sculptor.[2] In the second half of the 20th century, he became "the foremost African-American abstract sculptor and artist of public sculpture."[3] A Chicago native, Hunt studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s. While there he received multiple prizes for his work. In 1971, he was the first African-American sculptor to have a retrospective at Museum of Modern Art. Hunt has created over 160 public sculpture commissions, more than any other sculptor[4] in prominent locations in 24 states across the United States.[5]

With a career spanning seven decades, Hunt held over 170 solo exhibitions and is represented in more than 125 public museums across the world. His notable abstract, modern and contemporary sculpture and works on paper have appeared in museum and gallery exhibitions since the 1950s. Richard Hunt used “industrial materials and modern methods to sculpt organic forms and historical archetypes, such as freedom, flight, and progress” throughout his career.[6]

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Gerald Williams (born 1941 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American visual artist whose work has been influential within the Black Arts Movement,[1][2] a transnational aesthetic phenomenon that first manifested in the 1960s and continues to evolve today. Williams was a founding member of the Chicago artists' collective AfriCOBRA.[3] His work has been featured in exhibitions at some of the most important museums in the world, including the Tate Modern,[4] the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago,[5] the Studio Museum in Harlem,[6] and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia.[7]

In addition to his influence as a contemporary artist, he has served in the Peace Corps, taught in the public schools systems of Chicago and Washington, D.C., and served as an Arts and Crafts Center Director for the United States Air Force. In 2015, he moved back to his childhood neighborhood of woodlawn, Chicago, where he currently lives and works.

In 2019, Williams was awarded the Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy in Art by the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, along with his co-founders of AfriCOBRA, Jae Jarrell, and Wadsworth A. Jarrell.

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YOU CAN ACCESS THE VIDEO BELOW.

In summer of 2022, Kavi Gupta gallery in Chicago opened the most ambitious solo exhibition ever of the work of AFRICOBRA member Sherman Beck. In this video, AFRICOBRA founder Gerald Williams tours the exhibition with Sherman, and joins him in a conversation about the past, present, and future of his painting practice. Sherman Beck at Kavi Gupta | Washington Blvd. Fl. 2 : https://kavigupta.com/exhibitions/370... Video by Tom Clippard / www.tomclippardproductions.com

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Gerald Williams shares his Woodlawn Story