Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool Coming to PAFA

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6/30/2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Gigi Lamm
Public Relations Manager
215-972-2031
glamm@pafa.org

PHILADELPHIA—Birth of the Cool is the first career retrospective of Barkley L. Hendricks, renowned American artist, Philadelphia native, and alumnus of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA). The exhibition will run at PAFA from October 17, 2009 through January 3, 2010.
 
Hendricks is a seminal figure in the history of American portraitists whose work is uniquely situated at the crossing of American realism and post-modernism, walking a path between figurative artists such as Chuck Close and Alex Katz, and the conceptualism of African American artists like David Hammons and Adrian Piper. His pioneering influence appears in the work of younger generations of artists such as Kehinde Wiley and Rashid Johnson.
 
Best known for his stunning, life-sized canvasses portraying people of color from the urban northeast, it is through these cool, empowering and sometimes confrontational images that Hendricks explores the cultural complexity of black identity in the contemporary world. Variously he works from real life sitters and from photographs—he calls his camera his “mechanical sketchbook”— in a format that is reminiscent of images from fashion magazines and movie posters.
 
In these commanding, full-length portraits of African American men and women silhouetted against crisp monochromatic grounds, Hendricks’ transforms his subjects from ordinary people into larger than life celebrity icons.
 
Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool presents 57 paintings from 1964 to the present, including works that he produced while a student at the PAFA. As well as his extraordinary portraits of other people, the exhibition will include paintings Hendricksmade of himself, including the witty nude self-portrait Brilliantly Endowed (1977). Also
featured will be a number of porthole-shaped landscapes Hendricks has painted in Jamaica, where he has traveled annually for the past 25 years to paint en pleine air (outdoors in natural light). This section of the exhibition will be dedicated to Hendricks’ former Academy teacher, the late Louis B. Sloan.

"We are proud to represent the accomplishments of one of our most distinguished alumni, Barkley L. Hendricks. This is an exciting opportunity to reach out to the entire community, and to that end we are pleased to announce that we will waive admission fees on Sundays for the entire duration of this exhibition," says David R. Brigham, PAFA’s Edna S. Tuttleman Museum Director.
 
Birth of the Cool’s opening launches the Academy’s “FREE Sunday Series,” designed to enrich and engage families and their communities by providing opportunities to learn and create together. The series includes free admission to PAFA’s exhibitions as well as activities like hands-on art making workshops, music and dance performances, lectures, video screenings, and storytelling that take place each Sunday at 2 p.m. The first “FREE Sunday” program is Meet the Artist: Barkley Hendricks, Sunday, October 18.
   
A Philadelphia native born in 1945, Hendricks studied at PAFA from 1963 to 1967 and was the first African American student to be awarded two consecutive travel grants, the Cresson European Traveling Scholarship and the J. Henry Scheidt Traveling Scholarship. By his own admission, these two travel awards, which took him to museums and galleries throughout Europe and North Africa, “were unquestionably the instigators of a life of global look-seeing,” says Hendricks in the Birth of the Cool catalogue. 
 
Hendricks subsequently graduated with a BFA and MFA in painting and photography from Yale University. He has exhibited widely in solo and group shows and his works are held in major museum collections. The recipient of many awards and fellowships, he lives in New London, Connecticut where he has been a Professor of Art at Connecticut College since 1972.
 
Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool originated at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University in 2008, curated by Trevor Schoonmaker, and then traveled to the Studio Museum in Harlem and the Santa Monica Museum of Art. The exhibition will conclude at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (January 30 - April 18, 2010). 
 
PAFA's exhibition of Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool will be augmented with important works held in local Philadelphia private collections.
 
The exhibition is sponsored in part by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., the National Endowment for the Arts, which believes that a great nation deserves great art, the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation, and the North Carolina Arts Council with funding from the State of North Carolina.
 
Funding for the tour of Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage through the Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative. Additional support provided by an American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 grant through the National Endowment for the Arts, the Edna W. Andrade Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation, StoneRidge Investment Partners, LLC, the Lomax Family Foundation, and Mr. & Mrs. Harold Sorgenti.

Digital Images Available Upon Request

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About the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Founded in 1805, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) is America's first school of fine arts and museum.  A recipient of the 2005 National Medal of Arts presented by the President of the United States, PAFA is a recognized leader in fine arts education.  Nearly every major American artist has taught, studied, or exhibited at the Academy. The institution's world-class collection of American art continues to grow and provides what only a few other art institutions in the world offer: the rare combination of an outstanding museum and an extraordinary faculty known for its commitment to students and for the stature and quality of its artistic work.
 
Museum hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Academy is located at 118-128 N. Broad Street in Philadelphia. Admission to the Permanent Collection is Adults $10, Seniors & Students with I.D. $8, Youth ages 5-18, $6. Admission to Special Exhibitions (includes Permanent Collection) is Adults $15, Seniors & Students with I.D. $12, Youth Ages 5-18, $8. Admission is free for members and children under age of 5. Admission to Morris Gallery exhibitions is free.