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BookPrinted Material
Author Hunter, Clementine.

Title Talking with Tebé : Clementine Hunter, memory artist / edited by Mary E. Lyons.

Publication Info. Boston, Mass. : Houghton Mifflin, 1998.

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Children's & Young Adult Collection  CH/YA Bio Hunter Tal 1998    Available  ---  Gift of Phyllis Fantauzzo.
Description 48 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (page 47).
Summary Born in northwest Louisiana in 1886. Called Tebe; by her family, Hunter lived and worked on Melrose Plantation for more than 75 years. In colors as bright as the Louisiana sky, she shows the backbreaking work required to pick cotton, gather figs, cut sugar cane, and harvest pecans. Tebe;'s art portrays the good times, too. Scenes of baptisms, weddings, and church socials celebrate a rich community life that helped the workers survive. Hunter's work holds a special place in art history. She was the first self-taught artist to receive a fellowship from the Rosenwald Fund, in 1945, and the first self-taught African-American woman artist to receive national media attention. Between 1945 and 1987, over fifty museums and galleries showed her works. Some writers have called Clementine Hunter a creative genius. To others she was not a real artist but a "plantation Negro." Many were surprised that an older woman with no training could produce art at all. Now considered one of the finest folk artists.
Provenance Gift of Phyllis Fantauzzo.
Subject Hunter, Clementine.
Hunter, Clementine.
African American painters -- Louisiana -- Natchitoches -- Biography.
African American painters.
Louisiana -- Natchitoches.
Genre/Form Biographies.
Autobiographies.
Autobiographies.
Added Author Lyons, Mary E.
ISBN 0395720311
9780395720318