Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#FaithRinggold
Advertisement · 728 × 90
A large story quilt opens onto a glowing field of sunflowers beneath a pale blue sky and buildings of Arles, France. Across the center, eight Black women stand shoulder to shoulder behind a quilt patterned with “Van Gogh” sunflowers: Madam C. J. Walker, Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, Fannie Lou Hamer, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Mary McLeod Bethune, and Ella Baker. Their names are written on the edge before them, turning the picture into both portrait and record. At lower left is Willia Marie Simone, American artist Faith Ringgold’s fictional Black woman artist-traveler from her “The French Collection” series, looking upward into the scene. At far right, iconic artist Vincent van Gogh stands apart holding cut sunflowers, more observer than hero. Handwritten text runs along the border, so the quilt is image, story, and testimony at once.

Ringgold transforms Arles from a site of European artistic myth into a gathering place for Black women’s intellect, labor, survival, and political imagination. Quilting is the key. It is communal rather than solitary, historically linked to women’s work, Black memory, and intergenerational making. These sitters are not random icons but builders of freedom like abolition, anti-lynching journalism, civil rights, education, economic self-determination, and grassroots organizing stitched into one shared surface. The sunflower carries layered meaning. It nods to van Gogh, but Ringgold reclaims that visual legacy, placing Black women at the center while the famous male painter stands respectfully at the edge. In Ringgold’s broader thinking, quilting can stand for piecing a broken world back together. This work imagines art as collective world-making. Born in Harlem, Ringgold had learned sewing and fabric traditions through her mother, Willi Posey, and by 1991 she was fully using the story quilt to collapse the old hierarchy between “fine art” and so-called craft. Here, the women author history, beauty, and change together.

A large story quilt opens onto a glowing field of sunflowers beneath a pale blue sky and buildings of Arles, France. Across the center, eight Black women stand shoulder to shoulder behind a quilt patterned with “Van Gogh” sunflowers: Madam C. J. Walker, Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, Fannie Lou Hamer, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Mary McLeod Bethune, and Ella Baker. Their names are written on the edge before them, turning the picture into both portrait and record. At lower left is Willia Marie Simone, American artist Faith Ringgold’s fictional Black woman artist-traveler from her “The French Collection” series, looking upward into the scene. At far right, iconic artist Vincent van Gogh stands apart holding cut sunflowers, more observer than hero. Handwritten text runs along the border, so the quilt is image, story, and testimony at once. Ringgold transforms Arles from a site of European artistic myth into a gathering place for Black women’s intellect, labor, survival, and political imagination. Quilting is the key. It is communal rather than solitary, historically linked to women’s work, Black memory, and intergenerational making. These sitters are not random icons but builders of freedom like abolition, anti-lynching journalism, civil rights, education, economic self-determination, and grassroots organizing stitched into one shared surface. The sunflower carries layered meaning. It nods to van Gogh, but Ringgold reclaims that visual legacy, placing Black women at the center while the famous male painter stands respectfully at the edge. In Ringgold’s broader thinking, quilting can stand for piecing a broken world back together. This work imagines art as collective world-making. Born in Harlem, Ringgold had learned sewing and fabric traditions through her mother, Willi Posey, and by 1991 she was fully using the story quilt to collapse the old hierarchy between “fine art” and so-called craft. Here, the women author history, beauty, and change together.

“The French Collection Part I, #4: The Sunflowers Quilting Bee at Arles” by Faith Ringgold (American) - Acrylic on canvas with pieced fabric border / 1991 - Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (Illinois) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomenArtists #FaithRinggold #Ringgold #art #artText #BlackArt #MCAChicago

54 9 2 0
Preview
Faith Ringgold: An American Icon Ringgold is an American treasure whose artistic journey has followed her own truths interwoven into the uncomfortable history of the nation.

Faith Ringgold was an artist, educator, storyteller, activist, and a mother. Ringgold was also an American treasure whose artistic journey has followed her own truths, many of which are interwoven into the uncomfortable history of the nation.
www.dailyartmagazine.com/faith-ringgo...

#faithringgold

6 1 0 0
Post image

Faith Ringgold
American artist and writer
Sonny's Quilt aka Sonny's Bridge, 1986
Art quilt
Acrylic on cotton canvas
85 x 60 inches

#artquilt
#FaithRinggold

16 1 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

To celebrate Black History Month, I am posting work of a Black artist from history per day.
For February 26th, I am posting work by Faith Ringgold. (2/2)
#BlackHistoryMonth #FaithRinggold #painter #textileartist
@arnekay.bsky.social kay.bsky.social @srivas.bsky.social

3 1 0 1
Post image Post image Post image

To celebrate Black History Month, I am posting work of a Black artist from history per day.
For February 26th, I am posting work by Faith Ringgold. (1/2)
#BlackHistoryMonth #FaithRinggold #painter #textileartist
@arnekay.bsky.social kay.bsky.social @srivas.bsky.social

2 0 0 1
Post image

#FaithRinggold ❤️

#YouthPLAYS #theatre #theatreeducation #educator #artteacher #youngartist #dramateacher #actor #writer #author #playwright #drama #education #teacher #theatreteacher #play #acting #art #artist #play #performer #publishing #publishingcompany #publisher

4 0 0 0
Zoé Whitley: “Invocando ancestros, inspirando descendientes: Faith Ringgold y la literatura”, en Faith Ringgold: American People , Ed. Massimiliano y Gary Carrion-Murayi, Londres y Nueva York, 2022.

Zoé Whitley: “Invocando ancestros, inspirando descendientes: Faith Ringgold y la literatura”, en Faith Ringgold: American People , Ed. Massimiliano y Gary Carrion-Murayi, Londres y Nueva York, 2022.

Faith Ringgold (1930-2024) fue una artista, escritora y activista afroamericana conocida principalmente por sus pinturas al óleo durante la década de los 60, pero su interés por el arte textil la llevó a crear colchas a las que llamó «colchas de cuentos» […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]

5 0 1 0
If you don’t tell your own story, someone else will. – Faith Ringgold

If you don’t tell your own story, someone else will. – Faith Ringgold

If you don’t tell your own story,
someone else will.

– Faith Ringgold

#faithringgold #inspirationalquotes #wordsofwisdom #artquotes #artquote #quotesoftheday #quotes #kunstzitate #art #kunst #artagenda #artherenow

4 0 0 0
Post image

Photograph of Faith Ringgold; Miami Museum of Contemporary Art of the African Diaspora; courtesy: Estate of Faith Ringgold. #blackhistorymonth #faithringgold #africanamericanartist #blackculture #art #modernart #americanart #womanartist #museum #artgallery

16 1 0 0
Video

#BlackHistory365 #Alkebulan🌍 #Truth #FaithRinggold 👑

0 0 0 0
Post image

#FaithRinggold bringing the truth at Shainman.

3 1 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Coming up this week #faithringgold at #jackshainman; #helenfrankenthaler at #MoMA; #dawnwilliamsboyd at Ft Gansevoort; Salon Concert at Academy of Arts & Letters + more

gothamtogo.com/art-installa...

1 1 0 0
Preview
‘Faith Ringgold’ at Jack Shainman Gallery - GothamToGo Jack Shainman Gallery is pleased to announce Faith Ringgold, its inaugural exhibition dedicated to the trailblazing American artist, author, educator and activist. Spanning Ringgold’s extraordinary ca...

‘Faith Ringgold’ at Jack Shainman Gallery gothamtogo.com/faith-ringgo... On view November 14th #faithringgold

4 2 0 1
Preview
Jack Shainman Gallery Presents Faith Ringgold - Picture Preview A spokesperson describes the event as follows: "...Spanning Ringgold’s extraordinary career, the exhibition foregrounds her groundbreaking and multifaceted p

Read the extensive commentary by Jack Shainman Gallery--describing her as "restlessly creative..." and see the many images of Ringgold's work in this picture preview article--

#JackShainmanGallery #FaithRinggold #NYCArt #PictureThisPostArt #Painting #etching #printmaking #quilting
#art

4 0 1 0
American artist Faith Ringgold seated with a microphone at the symposium "We Wanted a Revolution"

American artist Faith Ringgold seated with a microphone at the symposium "We Wanted a Revolution"

#OnThisDay in 1930, American painter, author, mixed media sculptor, performance artist, and intersectional activist, Faith Ringgold was born in Harlem. She died in 2024 at 93.

#ArtSky #BOTD #FaithRinggold

6 0 0 0
Post image

Dziś przypada rocznica urodzin Faith Ringgold (1930–2024), artystki, która opowiadała historie przez malowane quilty. Jej twórczość to połączenie artystycznej formy i społecznego zaangażowania. (fot. Wikipedia) #FaithRinggold

1 0 0 0
Faith Ringgold | 8 October 1930 – 13 April 2024

Faith Ringgold | 8 October 1930 – 13 April 2024

Happy Birthday Faith Ringgold | Faith Ringgold | 8 October 1930 – 13 April 2024

#FaithRinggold #StoryQuilts #HarlemRenaissance #BlackFeministArt #ArtActivism #NarrativeArt #WomenArtists #AfricanAmericanArtist #MoMA #Künstlerin #art #kunst #artherenow #artagenda

8 1 0 0
Post image

#CapeCod #TextileArt #FaithRinggold

FAITH RINGGOLD

Her Story Quilts Were a Personal and Political Medium.

'Tar Beach'
encapsulates the essence of emancipation and self-expression she has pursued across her works.

1 1 0 0
Preview
High Museum Presents Faith Ringgold: Seeing Children - Picture Preview WHEN: June 27 – October 12, 2025 For more information visit the High Museum website. WHERE: High Museum of Art ​​1280 Peachtree Street,

A comprehensive exhibit -- magical!-- with theme of how Ringgold sees children- especially Black children-- Click the picture to see several more pictures and read more...

#HighMuseumofArt #FaithRinggold #AtlantaArt #PictureThisPostArt #PictureThisPostMuseums #AtlantaMuseums #BlackLivesMatter #art

7 1 0 0
Post image

FAITH RINGGOLD: SEEING CHILDREN
High Museum of Art, Atlanta | Through Oct 12

The most extensive show yet of Ringgold’s children’s book illustrations—100+ works, many never before exhibited.

Info: high.org

#FaithRinggold

1 0 0 1

I just read that #FaithRinggold was a trailblazer for racial and gender equity in the arts, known for confronting exclusionary practices in major institutions.

3 0 0 0
The cover is illustrated by Faith Ringgold, in 2007. Bright red brick house in background. Bronzville in bright yellow letters at the top. Four kids on or near stoop. A girl is pushing a baby carriage. A boy is catching a ball. Two girls are standing on the steps. A woman and child are watching from a window.

The cover is illustrated by Faith Ringgold, in 2007. Bright red brick house in background. Bronzville in bright yellow letters at the top. Four kids on or near stoop. A girl is pushing a baby carriage. A boy is catching a ball. Two girls are standing on the steps. A woman and child are watching from a window.

Happy Birthday Gwendolyn Brooks (1917)! 🎈 I learned from the brilliant @mariapopova.bsky.social, that #UrsulaNordstrom published a book of poems by Brooks in 1956: BRONZEVILLE BOYS AND GIRLS, illus. originally by Ronni Solbert, and, beautifully, in the reprint by #FaithRinggold. #kidlitHistory

3 0 0 0
The legendary American painter and author Faith Rinngold said she posed two or three times for this portrait. American artist Alice Neel painted her wearing a red dress with a patterned skirt and sleeves. She wears beads in her hair and around her neck along with hoop earrings. Ringgold is seated in a blue-and-white striped chair that appears in many of Neel’s portraits.

Ringgold lived and worked in Englewood, N.J., but she was born in Harlem and lived there for more than half of her career. The neighborhood inspired “Tar Beach,” the first of many children’s books authored by Ringgold. She was an inspirational activist during much of her life, participating in several feminist and anti-racist organizations.

Neel lived in East Harlem (Spanish Harlem) from 1938 to 1962. Then, she moved to West 107th Street, on the Upper West Side, a few blocks south of West Harlem, where she lived the rest of her life. She painted in her apartment, making portraits of her friends, neighbors, political activists, and fellow artists—many of them people of color.

Ringgold had known Neel about a decade when she sat for the portrait. They met in the late 1960s at the Art Workers Coalition. Ringgold said Neel was “interested in all kinds of change and progress.” In 2000, she told New York magazine she had just returned from West Africa when Neel asked to paint her nude. Ringgold said in part:

“I knew Alice had a way of painting people so that you saw them in ways you’d never seen them before. I didn’t want to be uncovered in that way. Now I kind of wish I had done it back then—because today I definitely wouldn’t pose in the nude. So anyway, I put on this red dress and my hair was braided with beads, because I had just come back from my trip and I thought the beads would go over well in Ghana and Nigeria, and that I could pass as an African—but they all knew I was American.”

The legendary American painter and author Faith Rinngold said she posed two or three times for this portrait. American artist Alice Neel painted her wearing a red dress with a patterned skirt and sleeves. She wears beads in her hair and around her neck along with hoop earrings. Ringgold is seated in a blue-and-white striped chair that appears in many of Neel’s portraits. Ringgold lived and worked in Englewood, N.J., but she was born in Harlem and lived there for more than half of her career. The neighborhood inspired “Tar Beach,” the first of many children’s books authored by Ringgold. She was an inspirational activist during much of her life, participating in several feminist and anti-racist organizations. Neel lived in East Harlem (Spanish Harlem) from 1938 to 1962. Then, she moved to West 107th Street, on the Upper West Side, a few blocks south of West Harlem, where she lived the rest of her life. She painted in her apartment, making portraits of her friends, neighbors, political activists, and fellow artists—many of them people of color. Ringgold had known Neel about a decade when she sat for the portrait. They met in the late 1960s at the Art Workers Coalition. Ringgold said Neel was “interested in all kinds of change and progress.” In 2000, she told New York magazine she had just returned from West Africa when Neel asked to paint her nude. Ringgold said in part: “I knew Alice had a way of painting people so that you saw them in ways you’d never seen them before. I didn’t want to be uncovered in that way. Now I kind of wish I had done it back then—because today I definitely wouldn’t pose in the nude. So anyway, I put on this red dress and my hair was braided with beads, because I had just come back from my trip and I thought the beads would go over well in Ghana and Nigeria, and that I could pass as an African—but they all knew I was American.”

Faith Ringgold by Alice Neel (American) - Oil on canvas / 1977 - Menil Collection (Houston, Texas) #womeninart #art #womensart #portraitofawoman #AliceNeel #Neel #FaithRinggold #Ringgold #MenilCollection #ArtText #HerStory #womanartist #femaleartist #oilpainting #artwork #AmericanArtist #bskyart

65 8 2 1
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Even though it was pouring rain, didn't want to miss the opening of #FaithRinggold The Reach of Faith Ringgold at #GuggenheimMuseum

gothamtogo.com/faith-ringgo...

9 1 0 0
Preview
Faith Ringgold. The Reach of Faith Ringgold to Open at Guggenheim Museum in May - GothamToGo The Guggenheim New York presents the Collection in Focus exhibition centering one of the most important works by the renowned artist, writer, and activist Faith Ringgold. The Reach of Faith Ringgold w...

Looking forward to the opening of #Faithringgold at #guggenheimmuseum on Friday.

gothamtogo.com/faith-ringgo...

1 0 0 0
Post image Post image

Too beautiful #faithringgold #antiquesroadshow

7 1 0 0
Post image

Detail from Tar Beach, 1991 #faithringgold

2 0 0 0

#faithringgold

0 0 0 0
Post image

#MayaAngelou was born on April 4, 1928. Here is "Maya's Quilt of Life" by #FaithRinggold, with excerpts from her poems: Just Give Me A Cool Drink of Water 'Fore I Diii , Gather Together In My Name, The Heart of A Woman, I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings.
#WomenArtists #WomenWriters

19 2 0 0