- Jubilee: Ghana Harvest Festival
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This painting depicts a festival, or durbar, held annually in Ghana to celebrate the passage of the seasons and the harvest. The cyclical passage of the seasons is echoed in the swaying rhythms of the singing and dancing women. It is based on a series of drawings John Biggers made while in the Ghana region of West Africa in 1957.
During the 1940s, Biggers forged a new painting style that was rooted both in the Mexican mural movement and in the 1930s murals commissioned by the U.S. government as part of the Federal Arts Project. Biggers arrived in Houston in 1949 to head the art department at the newly opened Texas Southern University. Embracing mural painting as a means of expressing his heritage, he became the region´s most eloquent chronicler of the changing identity of African Americans. In 1957 Biggers was a pioneer in traveling to Africa to learn more about his cultural roots. Out of his experiences he developed a unique synthesis of African, European, and American art that influenced numerous younger artists.
ProvenanceThe artist; purchased by MFAH, 1985.
Exhibition History"Fresh Paint: The Houston School," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, January 25–April 7, 1985; Institute for Art and Urban Resources, Inc. (MoMA P.S. 1), New York, May 5–Jun 21, 1985; Oklahoma Art Center, Oklahoma City, July 18–September 1, 1985.
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, July 29, 1987–January 17, 1989.
"John Biggers," Milton Rhodes Gallery, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, February 11–March 9, 1989; I.P. Stanback Museum, Orangeburg, South Carolina, April 1–May 5, 1989; Montgomery Museum of Fine Art, Alabama, June 11–July 23, 1989.
"Black Art - Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African-American Art," Dallas Art Museum, December 3, 1989–February 25, 1990; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, May 22–August, 5 1990; Milwaukee Art Museum, September 14–November 18, 1990; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, January 28–March 24, 1991.
"The Art of John Biggers: The View from the Upper Room," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, April 2–September 3, 1995; North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, October 14, 1995–January 14, 1996; The Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut, May 19–July 14, 1996; The Hampton University Art Museum, Hampton, Virginia, October 6–December 10, 1996; The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, January 24–April 20, 1997.
"Statements: African American Art from the Museum's Collection," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, January 24–September 25, 2016.
"Origins: The Historical Legacy of Visual Art at Winston-Salem State University," Diggs Gallery at Winston-Salem State University, North Carolina, July 27, 2017–January 11, 2018.
"The Marzio Years: Transforming the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1982–2010," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, October 25, 2020–January 10, 2021.
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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