-
Artworks
Wadsworth Jarrell
Baddest Two Dudes Alive: Huey and Bobby, 1971Pencil on paper40 x 50 in
101.6 x 127 cm6159This drawing is one of a series of three images Wadsworth created in 1971, memorializing his respect for the Founders of the Black Panther Party: Huey P. Newton and Bobby...This drawing is one of a series of three images Wadsworth created in 1971, memorializing his respect for the Founders of the Black Panther Party: Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. The Black Panther Party was founded by Newton and Seale in 1966, the year before Wadwsworth participated in the Wall of Respect. On the left of this image, we see Huey Newton, a picture of the Revolutionary, donning a bullet belt and holding a shotgun. On the right, we see Bobby Seale, pensively looking upwards and holding his "Power Fist" over his heart, an image evocative of the strong rhetoric and philosophical leadership he brought to the movement.
Artist Biography
Wadsworth Jarrell (b. 1929, United States) is a painter, sculptor, and co-founder of the Black Arts collective AFRICOBRA. Recent exhibitions include AFRICOBRA: Nation Time, an official collateral exhibition of the 2019 Venice Biennale, and AFRICOBRA: Messages to the People at the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, and Soul of a Nation, which originated at the Tate Modern.
Born in Albany, Georgia, Jarrell was raised on a working farm. Inspired by the art in the Saturday Evening Post, he hoped to become an illustrator. He joined the US Army after high school and became the company artist for his unit. After the army, Jarrell moved to Chicago. While working at the International Paint factory, he enrolled in night classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. Initially focused on design and illustration, he switched his attention to fine art after visiting various Chicago art museums. Back in Georgia, blacks had not been allowed inside museums. Seeing masterpieces for the first time in person inspired Jarrell. He enrolled full time at SAIC in 1954, and earned his BA in 1958.
Wadsworth has developed many distinct bodies of work, including sculptures inspired by the African cultural traditions, and a series of paintings dedicated to jazz musicians. A distinctive tool Wadsworth has used in some paintings is a brick laying trowel—something he learned to utilize in 1982, while creating a 300 foot mural at the headquarters of Westinghouse Electric Company. His work is widely collected, and is included in several important institutional collections, including that of the High Museum of Art, the National Museum of Africa American History and Culture, and the Studio Museum in Harlem.Provenance
The artist's studio, Chicago, USA
Kavi Gupta, Chicago, USA
Exhibitions
Wadsworth Jarrell & Gerald Williams: Works on Paper, 2021, Kavi Gupta, Chicago, USA