词条 | Pippin, Horace |
释义 | Pippin, Horace American artist born February 22, 1888, West Chester, Pennsylvania, U.S. died July 6, 1946, West Chester American folk painter known for his depictions of African American life and of the horrors of war. Pippin's childhood was spent in Goshen, New York, a town that sometimes appears in his paintings. There he drew horses at the local racetrack and, according to his own account, painted biblical scenes on frayed pieces of muslin. He was variously employed as an ironworker, junk dealer, and porter, until World War I, when he served in the infantry. He was wounded in 1918 and discharged with a partially paralyzed right arm. He settled in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and eventually began to paint by burning designs into wood panels with a red-hot poker and then painting in the outlined areas. ![]() Additional Reading Selden Rodman, Horace Pippin: A Negro Painter in America (1947); Selden Rodman and Carole Cleaver, Horace Pippin: The Artist as a Black American (1972); Horace Pippin (1976), published by the Phillips Collection; Judith Stein et al., I Tell My Heart: The Art of Horace Pippin (1993). |
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