Genre. Naive. Primitive. African American. Six figures picking cotton; one smaller figure headed toward a water spigot in LR.

%C2%A9 Clementine Hunter

Picking Cotton, 1950s

Oil on boardexpand_more

The Ethel Morrison Van Derlip Fundexpand_more  91.88.1

Not on Viewexpand_more

Clementine Hunter, a Louisiana plantation worker, did not begin to paint until she was nearly sixty. Born about 1886, she spent much of her life working in cotton fields; she later became a cook for the owners of the Melrose plantation. In 1940, by chance, she found paints and brushes discarded by a visiting artist, and her experiments pleased her and impressed family and guests at Melrose. She began a second career as a folk painter, continuing to work until her death in 1988.

Like many folk painters, Clementine Hunter chose her subject matter from her own daily life. Scenes of picking cotton, threshing pecans, and boiling wash are interspersed with weddings, funerals, and even brawls at the local honky-tonk. Her paintings record a distinctive time and place, with a degree of detail borne of a lifetime of experience. Transformed through her composition, original use of color, and subtle wit, these events become timeless.

Details
Title
Picking Cotton
Artist Life
1886/87 - 1988
Role
Artist
Accession Number
91.88.1
Curator Approved

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Genre. Naive. Primitive. African American. Six figures picking cotton; one smaller figure headed toward a water spigot in LR.

© Clementine Hunter

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