Artwork Page for Bird of Paradise

Details / Information for Bird of Paradise

Bird of Paradise

1971
(American, 1929–1993)
Culture
America
Measurements
Sheet: 45.1 x 61 cm (17 3/4 x 24 in.)
Credit Line
Copyright
Copyright
This artwork is known to be under copyright.
Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Vivian Browne described her Africa Series—to which this work belongs—as conveying “such an emotional uplift” during her travels around the continent.

Description

Vivian Browne was active in the feminist art scene of New York during the 1960s and 70s, especially groups that supported Black women artists. She abandoned figurative painting in favor of abstraction during a trip to Africa in 1971. Browne accompanied historian and artist Floyd Coleman to Nigeria, Ghana, and Benin, among other locales, studying at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria for six weeks. These travels inspired her best-known body of work, to which this drawing belongs.
Horizontally oriented watercolor and pastel on cream paper depicts a highly abstract scene of layered forms. To the left, a thick magenta stroke points upward, textured with black scribbles. Orange and peach zigzag bands span the center, meeting a large, dark gray circle on the right. Encased in concentric black rings and overlapped by jagged magenta shapes, this focal point radiates four red wavy lines extending toward the right edge.

Bird of Paradise

1971

Vivian E. Browne

(American, 1929–1993)
America

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