NEW YORK, NY.- Christies will offer Bill Traylors Man on White, Woman on Red / Man with Black Dog (double-sided), from the collection of Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Alice Walker, as a highlight of the Outsider Art sale on January 17 (estimate: $200,000 400,000). This rare painting was a gift from filmmaker Steven Spielberg to Alice Walker after the conclusion of filming The Color Purple, a film adaptation of Walkers Pulitzer Prize-winning novel focused on the lives of African-American women in the 1930s.
Alice Walker, writer, poet, and activist, remarked: After Steven Spielberg completed filming The Color Purple, in 1985, he gave me as a gift, Man on White, Woman on Red. He was hopeful (he said with a smile) that when I saw the film, I didnt feel like the angry Woman on Red. I answered (with a laugh) I hope so too. On my first viewing a private one in San Francisco I did have some reservations. But I soon came to realize that overall Stevens The Color Purple is a masterpiece. Ive enjoyed having this extraordinary artwork by Bill Traylor on my wall; but my spirit tells me that it is time for it to find a new home.
Cara Zimmerman, Head of Sale, Outsider Art at Christies, commented: We are honored to present this superb work by Bill Traylor at auction for the first time, marking an exciting and unique opportunity for collectors. The provenance of the work creates an interesting conversation between Alice Walkers The Color Purple and Traylors art, as both consider a similar moment in American history hers looking back, and his from a contemporaneous perspective. Additionally, this work includes an exciting rediscovery: its double-sided nature had been concealed for many years. It was recently unframed for the first time since the mid-1980s, revealing the Man with Black Dog work on the reverse.
Man on White, Woman on Red / Man with Black Dog (double-sided) is an exceptional and large-scale work which reveals insights to Bill Traylors artistic process. The underdrawings beneath Man on White, Woman on Red demonstrate Traylors compositional approaches, working process, and concerns with space and line. Man on White, Woman on Red includes a red-painted background, a technique he employed rarely and is almost contemporary in its color play. The bold rendering of the oversized dog with red tongue and ferocious teeth on Man with Black Dog indicates it was possibly created as part of a series of works in which the artist experimented with dogs similarly rendered with these features.
BILL TRAYLOR (1853-1949)
Born into slavery in 1853, self-taught artist Bill Traylor only began to make work in 1939, around the age of 86. Having spent his entire working life on plantations and farms, in 1928 he moved to the state capital of Montgomery, where he would begin to draw for the first time. Life in Montgomery proved difficult: although he sought employment, painful rheumatism left Traylor unable to work. With no income except a small public stipend, he became homeless, sleeping in the backroom of a funeral parlor at night, and spending the day camped out on the citys Monroe Street. Daily life on Monroe Street, and his memories of plantations, inspired Traylors art. Working in pencil, tempera or colored pencil on repurposed card and paper, his subjects include people he saw on the street, animals and livestock, and found objects.