Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Self-Taught Artists

 William Louis-Dreyfus had a passion for self-taught artists.  

The small drawing on the top is by Bill Traylor, an illiterate and uneducated African American man who was born into slavery.  For 70 years he worked on an Alabama plantation.  Beginning when he was 84, he sat outside a pool hall and drew on scraps of cardboard.  Over the three years before he died, Traylor produced more than 1200 works, some of which now hang in America's most prominent art museums.

The lower work is by James Castle, a deaf man from Idaho who could not read or write.  He lived his life in his family home, near where his parents had a general store and a post office.  Castle taught himself to draw with salvaged paper and ink made from soot and saliva.  Like Traylor, Castle's works now hang in prominent museums.

4 comments:

RedPat said...

The 2 of them probably passed away with little money and now their work sells for piles of money. I don't know the solution to that.

Taken For Granted said...

Artistic talent has little to do with education as shown by the works of these two artists. Dreyfus had a great eye for collecting.

William Kendall said...

RedPat had much the same thought as I did.

Amy said...

wow ink from soot and saliva, just goes to show how inventive people were.