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In this course, students in grades 1-4 will learn about the work of visual artist #HowardenaPindell and her painted collages! https://loom.ly/JJ4Nh7M

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Howardena Pindell, Untitled #57 [Carnival], 1974-75, Private collection

Another title: Trumpian Sovereignty (and not only trumpian...), 2026

#howardenapindell #untitled #carnival #acrylics #watercolor #trump #sovereignty
#dada #surrealism #popart #conceptualart #appropriationart #fakeart #fuckart

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Back to the WC Bermondsey for a new to me artist that appeals to my love of modern abstract through pointillism, with hidden figures and on a grand scale
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In this vertical oil painting, a young Black woman, the artist herself, fills a small Masonite panel from chest up, turned slightly to her left while facing us with a steady, unsmiling gaze. Her medium-brown skin is modeled in bold planes of yellow-tan, olive green, and rosy shadows, so the face feels both sculpted and vulnerable. Thick, visible brushstrokes build the high bridge of her nose, full lips, and her wide, pale eyes that seem to catch light without sharp pupils, intensifying her watchful expression. Her dark hair is parted and swept back close to the head, forming a compact cap of paint. She wears a deep green top with a warm coral-pink collar wrapping snugly around her neck, adding a band of color that echoes the tones in her face. Behind her, loosely painted greens and creams suggest a studio interior or landscape glimpsed through a window, leaving the setting deliberately indistinct so that our attention stays on her searching, self-defining stare.

Painted in 1962, when Howardena Pindell was studying painting at Boston University, this early self-portrait shows her working through figuration before the abstract, hole-punched canvases that would later make her famous. Rough, layered brushwork and deliberately exaggerated color signal an artist testing how paint can register both likeness and emotion. The yellow-green mask of her face may suggest the tension of being seen and mis-seen as a young Black woman in predominantly white art institutions. Seen in hindsight, the work quietly anticipates Pindell’s lifelong engagement with racism, feminism, and the politics of visibility, even as it remains a straightforward exercise in looking hard at herself. This modest panel stands as an important record of an emerging artist who would go on to become a trailblazing curator at MoMA, a co-founder of A.I.R. Gallery, and a vital voice in contemporary art and criticism, insisting that Black women artists be visible on their own terms.

In this vertical oil painting, a young Black woman, the artist herself, fills a small Masonite panel from chest up, turned slightly to her left while facing us with a steady, unsmiling gaze. Her medium-brown skin is modeled in bold planes of yellow-tan, olive green, and rosy shadows, so the face feels both sculpted and vulnerable. Thick, visible brushstrokes build the high bridge of her nose, full lips, and her wide, pale eyes that seem to catch light without sharp pupils, intensifying her watchful expression. Her dark hair is parted and swept back close to the head, forming a compact cap of paint. She wears a deep green top with a warm coral-pink collar wrapping snugly around her neck, adding a band of color that echoes the tones in her face. Behind her, loosely painted greens and creams suggest a studio interior or landscape glimpsed through a window, leaving the setting deliberately indistinct so that our attention stays on her searching, self-defining stare. Painted in 1962, when Howardena Pindell was studying painting at Boston University, this early self-portrait shows her working through figuration before the abstract, hole-punched canvases that would later make her famous. Rough, layered brushwork and deliberately exaggerated color signal an artist testing how paint can register both likeness and emotion. The yellow-green mask of her face may suggest the tension of being seen and mis-seen as a young Black woman in predominantly white art institutions. Seen in hindsight, the work quietly anticipates Pindell’s lifelong engagement with racism, feminism, and the politics of visibility, even as it remains a straightforward exercise in looking hard at herself. This modest panel stands as an important record of an emerging artist who would go on to become a trailblazing curator at MoMA, a co-founder of A.I.R. Gallery, and a vital voice in contemporary art and criticism, insisting that Black women artists be visible on their own terms.

“Self-Portrait” by Howardena Pindell (American) - Oil on Masonite / 1962 - Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, New York) #WomenInArt #art #artText #artwork #HowardenaPindell #Pindell #TheMet #SelfPortrait #BlackArt #BlackWomenArtists #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #AfricanAmericanArtist

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Preview
“Howardena Pindell: Inner Circle” | Art21 "Extended Play" Episode [295]: For nearly six decades, artist Howardena Pindell has explored and expanded the language of abstraction while struggling against a racist and misogynistic…

Howardena Pindell’s abstract art. Her work intertwines personal experiences with systemic themes, offering a unique perspective on abstraction. #HowardenaPindell #AbstractArt #ArtFilm

vimeo.com/1028895402

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In the Studio: Howardena Pindell | White Cube
In the Studio: Howardena Pindell | White Cube YouTube video by White Cube

We recently started working with renowned artist / curator #howardenapindell. Coming of age during the civil rights movement, she began her career working at MoMA, later co-founding A.I.R. gallery, teaching + advocating for women artists. We made a great film with her 👉🏾 youtu.be/8uYhzSviCvQ?...

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