LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art today confirmed that it purchased Robert Colescotts 1975 painting George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware: Page from an American History Textbook at auction at Sothebys New York on May 12.
The monumental painting, measuring 78 ½ x 98 ¼ inches, has been exhibited and published many times since it was first shown in a museum, in the Whitneys 1978 traveling exhibition Art About Art. Over the years, it has come to be seen as the apex work in the career of Robert Colescott (19252009) and a stunning breakthrough in late 20th-century American art, emboldening many other artists with its outspoken Blackness, outraged and outrageous political content, high-handed appropriation of art history, and scabrous, satirical use of cartoon imagery.
Writing about the painting in 1984 for Artforum, Lowery Stokes Sims called George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware a veritable masterpiece of unparalleled formal rigor and graphic grandeur, which radically rewrites the American national self-mythology, parodying the grandeur of historical genre painting while exposing the structural racial divides of the United States.
Sandra Jackson-Dumont, Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Lucas Museum, said, The acquisition of this significant painting brings into our collection a dynamic vehicle for exploring the many dimensions of narrative art. It is at once a contemporary and historical work of art. Visitors to the Lucas Museum will be able to explore and unpack racially, socially, and historically charged and significant figures, such as George Washington Carver, Aunt Jemima, and Uncle Ben, that Colescott intrudes into the patriotic narrative known from popular culture and Emmanuel Leutzes iconic, 1851 Washington Crossing the Delaware. Our hope is that they will consider how a visual artist can charge and change the story with complex histories and emotions.
George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware was first exhibited in 1975 at John Berggruen Gallery in San Francisco. A private collector in Saint Louis acquired the painting from the gallery in 1976, and the work has remained in that collection until now.