NASHVILLE, TENN.- The Frist Art Museum presents David C. Driskell & Friends: Creativity, Collaboration, and Friendship, an exhibition that traces the artists career and his relationships with contemporaries. It is being shown concurrently with Kindred Spirits: Intergenerational Forms of Expression, 19661999, an exhibition that explores the legacy and influence of Fisk Universitys art department, which Driskell led from 1966 to 1976.
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Organized by the David C. Driskell Center, University of Maryland, David C. Driskell & Friends is on view in the Frists Upper-Level Galleries from March 14 through June 1, 2025. During the same dates, Kindred Spirits, organized through a partnership between Fisk University Galleries and the Frist, is on view at both locations.
David C. Driskell & Friends highlights the artistic legacy of David C. Driskell (1931 2020) and the importance of his relationships with fellow artistsmany of whom hold a significant place in the 20th- century art canon, such as Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett, Earl J. Hooks, Jacob Lawrence, Alma W. Thomas, Kara Walker, Hale Woodruff, and many others. In total, there are more than 70 artworks by 35 prominent African American artists, as well as ephemera from the Driskell Papers that exemplify the artists unique friendships.
We are proud to bring Driskells story back to Nashville, a city that played a central role in his journey, writes Frist Art Museum Associate Curator Michael Ewing. While many envision the modern artist as solitary, Driskells career tells a different story one rooted in collaboration and community. As an artist, educator, curator, and historian, Driskell championed and elevated African American art, emphasizing the importance of both individual achievement and collective support.
Driskells collaborations shaped his artistic vision. He was instrumental in organizing solo exhibitions for artists including Bearden, Catlett, Hooks, and Thomas. He also played a key role in curating retrospectives for figures like Claude Clark and Aaron Douglas.
In 1976, Driskell curated the groundbreaking exhibition Two Centuries of Black American Art, which was foundational for the field of African American art history. Organized for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, it also traveled to Atlantas High Museum of Art, the Dallas Museum of Art, and the Brooklyn Museum. The exhibition received widespread recognition, and its accompanying catalogue remains a key text for artists and scholars of African American art. Many of the artists featured in Two Centuries of Black American Art are included in David C. Driskell & Friends.
Originally conceived by Dr. Sheila Bergman (University of California, Riverside), Curlee Raven Holton (former director The David C. Driskell Center), and Heather Sincavage (Wilkes University), the exhibitions presentation at the Frist was overseen by Michael Ewing. The collaborative effort behind this showcase mirrors the ethos it seeks to celebrate, emphasizing the interconnectedness that defined Driskells artistic legacy.
Kindred Spirits: Intergenerational Forms of Expression, 19661999
Kindred Spirits examines and celebrates a critical period spanning David C. Driskells tenure as chair of Fisk Universitys Art Department (19661976) and the overlapping tenure of artist and educator Earl J. Hooks (19681999). Organized through a partnership between Fisk University Galleries and the Frist Art Museum, this exhibition showcases more than 50 art objects and archival materials, including recordings of oral interviews, and spans gallery spaces at both the Frist and Fisk Universitys Carl Van Vechten Gallery and at the John Hope and Aurelia E. Franklin Library Special Collections.
The year 1966 marked the centennial of Fisk University, the oldest institution for higher learning in Nashville. It also represented a moment of transition after the retirement of Aaron Douglas, founder and chair of Fisks Art Department and a leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance. The appointment of Driskell as Douglass successor ushered in a broadening view of the African diasporic arts. Driskells vision aimed at expanding the department by hiring additional full- and part-time professors, establishing visiting-artist and artist-in-residency programs, planning a progressive exhibition schedule, and securing a dedicated building that would serve both the university and the Nashville community, write exhibition co- curators Michael Ewing and Jamaal B. Sheats, director and curator of Fisk University Galleries.
This vision was shared and further realized by faculty members such as Robert Hall, Earl J. Hooks, Stephanie Pogue, and Greg Ridley, among others. Kindred Spirits celebrates this lineage of artist- educators, their exchange of ideas, and their modes of expression across generations. This spirit born in Nashville continues to manifest itself through the canons of art history today, write Ewing and Sheats.
David C. Driskell (19312020) helped to advance the field of African American art history and was one of its leading authorities. Born in Eatonton, Georgia, Driskell grew up in North Carolina. An art major at Howard University, Driskell studied with James A. Porter and Loïs Mailou Jones, professors who profoundly impacted his future career. In 1953, he received a scholarship to attend the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. He remained a pivotal member of the prestigious schools community for decades to come, serving on the board of governors (197589) and boards of trustees (19892002); he also maintained a studio practice each summer in Fairmont, Maine. In 1962, Driskell earned an MFA degree from the Catholic University of America. The recipient of numerous fellowships, awards, and prizes, he also held 13 honorary doctoral degrees in art.
Driskell was also an influential educator, teaching at Talladega College, Howard University, Fisk University, and finally the University of Maryland. In 2001, the University of Maryland established the David C. Driskell Center, which honors Driskell by preserving the rich heritage of African American visual art and culture.
Driskells time at Fisk University marked a pivotal chapter in his career. As an associate professor and later the chair of the Art Department, he profoundly shaped the university and Nashvilles art scene. Through groundbreaking exhibitions, visiting artist programs, and artist-in-residence initiatives, he broadened the understanding of the African and African American visual art canons.
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