Details
Description
Charles Sebree (American, 1914 - 1985) framed original painting, gouache or maybe tempera, on Masonite of a Clown.
Measures 17 …
Read more
Charles Sebree (American, 1914 - 1985) framed original painting, gouache or maybe tempera, on Masonite of a Clown.
Measures 17 1/4" x 19 1/2", painting measures 9" x 11".
Signed at lower right.
As found: Charles Sebree was an American painter and playwright best known for his involvement in Chicago's black arts scene of the 1930s and 1940.
He was initially viewed with suspicion. The year was 1934, and the Grant Park Outdoor Art Fair was in full swing in Chicago as artists promoted their works to a crowd of fascinated buyers, collectors, and casuals. Upon meeting a 20-year-old artist named Charles Sebree at the event, William McKnight Farrow, founder of the Black arts organization, the Chicago Art League, watched as the little known Sebree made an impact on all the wide-eyed art lovers he engaged. Farrow would later note the young artist’s work “caused considerable controversy among the artists there, as well as among the visitors” and that Sebree possessed “a peculiar talent for producing work of an emotional quality. And strange as it seemed to those of academic training, he sold everything he took there for display.”
Though regarded a suspicious newbie by Chicago’s more established Black art circles, art was not new to Sebree. After relocating from Kentucky to Chicago with his mother in 1924 at the age 10, Sebree’s art teacher at the city’s Burke elementary school soon regarded him a prodigy. During his teenage years, Sebree’s artwork attracted the attention of the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, a prominent venue for the exhibition of modern art. He also attended Saturday art classes at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago with the likes of Margaret Taylor Burroughs, Eldzier Cortor, and Charles White.
In high school, Sebree met University of Chicago anthropology student, Katherine Dunham, and began dancing and doing set and costume design for Dunham’s popular dance productions. Upon graduating, he was employed by the Works Progress Administration’s Illinois Art Project before being drafted in 1942 and stationed at Camp Robert Smalls, north of Chicago. There, he met playwright Owen Dodson, and the two produced plays at the army camp including the Ballad of Dorrie Miller, depicting the Black naval attendant who saved the lives of shipmates at Pearl Harbor.
After the war, Sebree relocated to New York to work on his visual art and theatrical endeavors. In 1945, he received a Julius Rosenwald Fund fellowship and went on to cowrite what would become the hit Broadway musical, Mrs. Patterson, featuring Eartha Kitt. Consistently, his art would reflect a strong Modernist influence with his painted portraits commonly featuring performers and harlequins.
An important American painter, playwright, director, and set designer, Charles Sebree would spend the final decades of his life creating art in Washington D.C. before succumbing to cancer in 1985.
10795-2
See less
- Dimensions
- 17.25ʺW × 2ʺD × 19.5ʺH
- Styles
- The American School
- Frame Type
- Framed
- Period
- Mid 20th Century
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Gouache
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Red
- Condition Notes
- Excellent condition Excellent condition less
Questions about the item?
Returns & Cancellations
Return Policy - All sales are final 48 hours after delivery, unless otherwise specified in the description of the product.
Related Collections
- Drypoint Paintings
- Steve Kaufman Paintings
- Carrie Bergey Paintings
- Lee Krasner Paintings
- Roy Lichtenstein Paintings
- Sol LeWitt Paintings
- Damien Hirst Paintings
- Camille Pissarro Paintings
- Paintings in Panama City, FL
- George Coggeshall Paintings
- Nikolaos Schizas Paintings
- Laminate Paintings
- Limoges, France Paintings
- Rolph Scarlett Paintings
- Richard Anuszkiewicz Paintings
- William IV Paintings
- Donald Judd Paintings
- Jacobean Paintings
- Lee Reynolds Paintings
- Mid-Century Modern Paintings
- Abstract Paintings
- Landscape Paintings
- Portrait Paintings
- Nautical Paintings
- Velvet Paintings