Invention and Vision in the Work of Howard Finster

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Thursday April 27

2:00 PM  –  3:30 PM

VIRTUAL LECTURE • OUTSIDER ART SERIES

Invention and Vision in the Work of Howard Finster

Katherine Jentleson, Ph.D., The Merrie and Dan Boone Curator of Folk and Self-Taught Art, High Museum, Atlanta, GA

$10 (Members 10% discount)

The High Museum of Art has the largest public collection of the Reverend Howard Finster’s wide-ranging artwork outside of Paradise Garden, his still extant artist-built environment in North Georgia. In this talk, Jentleson shares recent research on works from the High’s collection, deepening and complicating the origin story of Finster’s artistic impulse, which he often attributed to a vision he experienced in January of 1976. Even before that seminal moment, however, Finster was busy following ideas about how to combine religious teaching, art, and roadside attractions to reach more people than he could from a pulpit.

 

Virtual Lecture Series: Self-Taught and Visionary Art

Inspired by Winfred Rembert’s autobiographical Cotton Pickers in the Dreams & Memories exhibition, this series of talks by experts in the field presents the opportunity to consider the role that dreams and personal histories can play in an artist’s creative work. So-called “folk art” produced by people outside the traditional avenues of art education often reflects the maker’s imagination and references to a personal past. Many self-taught artists found inspiration in spiritual beliefs, experiencing vivid dreams or visions they reflected in art ranging from painting to sculpture to full architectural environments.

 

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