From our newsletter archives. Originally published May 6, 2021.
Robert Colescott is currently on view at the New Museum of Contemporary Art.
Robert Colescott’s gaudily colored, densely packed, transgressive, cartoon-like paintings continue to garner surprising success. In 1997 he was selected to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale in an exhibition that traveled to nearly a dozen American museums over the next three years. Posthumously, his reputation is about to soar even higher. Next week his painting George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware: Page from an American History Textbook (1975) will go up for auction at Sotheby’s. It is expected to fetch between $9 – $12 million.
Colescott’s forte is satire and self-parody connected to his identity as a male African American artist. Using stereotypes, visual tropes, sarcasm, and puns, his work reveals life’s absurdities especially those that deal with race, sexuality and class. Rather than provide answers, Colescott’s paintings raise questions. They are easy to appreciate but as Richard J. Powell notes in his recent book Going There: Black Visual Satire, they have special appeal for the “satirically literate.”
Gallery 98 presents here a selection of gallery cards from Semaphore Gallery that represented Colescott in New York from 1981 to 1987. Although a generation older than the other artists that made up the gallery’s core, Colescott had six solo shows. Especially memorable was gallery director Barry Blinderman’s decision to rent a huge billboard on the corner of Houston and Broadway for Colescott’s 1984 exhibition.
See our complete inventory of Colescott ephemera here.
Les Demoiselles D’Alabama (1985)
Exhibition announcement for Robert Colescott’s Les Demoiselles D’Alabama (The de-abstraction of a masterpiece) at Semaphore East in 1986. Card size: 5.75″ x 6″
The Temptation of St. Anthony (1983)
Postcard for Robert Colescott’s exhibition at Semaphore Gallery, April 4 – May 5, 1983. Card size: 4.25 x 5.75 inches.
Listening to Amos & Andy (1982)
Card for Robert Colescott’s exhibition at Semaphore Gallery, 1982. Card size: 5.25 x 6 inches.
The Collector (Tea for Two), 1980
Postcard for Robert Colescott’s exhibition at Semaphore Gallery, January 6-31, 1980. Card size: 4.25 x 6 inches.
“Dear Bob, … We Loved Your Show…” (1984)
Poster from Robert Colescott’s exhibition at Semaphore Gallery, 1984. The image was used as a large billboard on Broadway and Houston for the exhibition. Poster size: 8.5 x 14 inches.
Robert Colescott in front of a billboard on the corner of Houston and Broadway, advertising his 1984 exhibition at Semaphore Gallery. Photo by David Forshtay.