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Madam C.J. Walker lives on at the Blanton

Madam C.J. Walker lives on at the Blanton

by Veronica Roberts, Former Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Blanton Museum of Art

Madam CJ Walker, 2008, by Sonya Clark. Combs are cut and arranged into the shape of a prominent female African-American businesswoman
Sonya Clark, “Madam C.J. Walker,” 2008, Combs, 122 × 87 in., Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Purchase through the generosity of Marilyn D. Johnson; Beverly Dale; Buckingham Foundation, Inc.; Jeanne and Michael Klein; Fredericka and David Middleton; H-E-B; Joseph and Tam Hawkins; Carmel and Gregory Fenves; The National Council of Negro Women (Austin Section); Lone Star (TX) Chapter of The Links, Incorporated; Town Lake (TX) Chapter of The Links, Incorporated; National Society of Black Engineers-Austin Professionals; Greater Austin Black Chamber of Commerce; National Black MBA Association Austin Chapter; and other donors.

In February of 2017, You Belong Here: Reimagining the Blanton opens at the Blanton. There is so much that we are excited to share in this new presentation of our collection. I’m delighted to introduce some very important recent acquisitions that we will be exhibiting for the first time. Here’s a sneak peek at one of the stars of the installation—that we are still raising funds to be able to purchase—a work I have dreamed about bringing to the Blanton since I arrived here as the curator of modern and contemporary art nearly four years ago.

This formidable ten-foot portrait by artist Sonya Clark depicts Madam C.J. Walker. Just who was she? Born shortly after the end of slavery, Madam Walker (born Sarah Breedlove) is said to be the nation’s first self-made female millionaire. Orphaned at age seven and widowed with a daughter at twenty, Walker earned fortune and fame by building a prosperous beauty empire, best known for its hair care products. As a businesswoman, she employed thousands of African-American women who would have otherwise been relegated to low-paying jobs.

Madam Walker was also a philanthropist and passionate public speaker. At significant conventions sponsored by major black organizations, she was often the only woman at the podium alongside Booker T. Washington and other black leaders. Walker flourished as an entrepreneur despite the odds, before Women’s Suffrage and long before the Civil Rights Movement. Her life is captured in one of her most famous statements: “I am a woman from the cotton fields of the South. I was promoted to the washtub. I was promoted to the kitchen. I promoted myself to the business of hair…on my own ground.”

I first learned about Madam Walker in a history class in college and remember feeling surprised I hadn’t already learned about this trailblazing entrepreneur and social activist. How had the fact that the first self-made female millionaire was an African-American woman escaped me until then? How was she not in the encyclopedias that I devoured in the basement as a kid or in my American history class in high school?

The year I graduated from college, Madam Walker appeared on a postage stamp, in a 1912 photo by African-American photographer Addison Scurlock. An avid letter writer, I still remember buying sheets of the stamps. Ten years later, I came across Sonya Clark’s portrait of Madam Walker in an exhibition at the Museum of Art and Design in New York. Clark used the same photo as the basis for her portrait, made entirely out of hair combs.

Sonya Clark’s decision to assemble the portrait out of combs was a powerful choice. As she recently explained to me, “I used 3,840 fine-toothed pocket combs to assemble this image of Walker. Combs speak to Walker’s career as a pioneer of hair care. I also used them because they capture our national legacy of hair culture, and the gender and race politics of hair. As disposable objects, they parallel the low social status of African-American women born in the late 1800s. But together, the thousands of combs become a monumental tapestry, signifying Walker’s magnitude and success despite her humble beginnings.”

The first time I saw this work was one of those stop-you-in-your-tracks art experiences: finally, Walker had been commemorated at a scale befitting her larger-than-life accomplishments and in a lasting way. Now, nearly ten years later, I feel so fortunate to have the chance to offer a similar experience to the thousands of visitors who come to the Blanton each year.

Several generous community members have made contributions to the Blanton to help us purchase this work of art so that it can forever be a part of our collection and the story we tell in the galleries. Marilyn Johnson, one of our Blanton National Leadership Board members, beautifully articulates the transformative potential of this work: “I have long been inspired by Madam C.J. Walker’s incredible life as a businesswoman, philanthropist, and activist who empowered so many others to achieve success. Seeing this work for the first time was such a powerful moment for me. Moreover, what I find most moving is that having it on view at the Blanton means that this important woman and her national legacy will be shared with our community—conveying to the public that this museum, and art, is something all of us can enjoy and learn from. I believe this will be a highlight of the Blanton collection.”

And don’t forget to keep an eye out for Madam C.J. Walker on view upstairs at the Blanton beginning in February…you can’t miss it!

About the Artist:

Sonya Clark was born in 1967 in Washington D.C. to a psychiatrist father from Trinidad and a nurse mother from Jamaica. She is a first-generation American and has drawn extensively upon her Caribbean, Scottish, and African ancestry in her work. Her maternal grandmother, a professional tailor, taught Clark how to sew and helped instill an appreciation for craft and the value of the handmade. Her interest in hair emerged at an early age: “When I was growing up in D.C., my family lived across the street from the Ambassador of Benin and his family of fourteen. They lived in a large mansion and always welcomed us. My sister and I would go over there to play and return home with elaborate hairstyles.”[1]

Clark received her BA in psychology from Amherst College in 1989 and her BFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1993: “My formal training as an artist began at the Art institute of Chicago with Ann Wilson, Nick Cave, and Joan Livingstone, and cemented the artful connections between hair, craft, and design.” In 1995, she obtained an MFA from the Cranbrook Academy of Art.

Her work has been exhibited in over 300 museums and galleries throughout the world. She has received many prestigious awards, residencies, and fellowships including a Pollock-Krasner Award, a Rockefeller Foundation Residency in Italy, a Red Gate Residency in China, a Wisconsin Art Board Fellowship, and a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship, and, most recently, she received the two awards at ArtPrize 2014. Currently, she is the chair of the Department of Craft/Material Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in Richmond.

[1] http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/CultureShock/archives/2014/09/04/1858-prize-profile-sonya-clark

8 thoughts on “Madam C.J. Walker lives on at the Blanton”

  1. Thank you for sharing the stories associated with the artwork , the artist and your personal discovery of the piece and it’s subject. Looking forward to seeing it in person. Hope you have an enormous community celebration and that the artist attends.
    Will donate toward the purchase as soon as my budget recovers from supporting Bernie and Jill!!

    1. Lizabel Stella

      Hi Susan, we thought you might be interested to know about our upcoming online Q&A around Madam C.J. Walker which is taking place on Tuesday, June 16, 2020 at 5pm CST.

      If you’d like to register for this free event, you can do so here: https://bit.ly/blantoncc11zoom We hope you can join us!

  2. Thank you for having Madam C.J. Walker artwork. It spoke volumes to me and my friends and we were completely struck by how magnificent it is. I hope that the Blanton is able to buy it. That’s for buying such inclusion art.

    1. Lizabel Stella

      Hi Lori, thank you so much for this thoughtful comment! We do own this artwork and are delighted to share this important work with the public. We hope you can come back again soon!

    2. Lizabel Stella

      Hi Lori, we thought you might be interested to know about our upcoming online Q&A around Madam C.J. Walker which is taking place on Tuesday, June 16, 2020 at 5pm CST.

      If you’d like to register for this free event, you can do so here: https://bit.ly/blantoncc11zoom We hope you can join us!

  3. Amy Frances Egan

    I saw this amazing piece (or one just like it?) at the Museum of Art and Design in NYC- must have been 2009 or so. My daughter was in Kindergarten and we were on a Field Trip.

    Now I’m at art teacher (remote teaching) and with the Netflix show so popular this is a great connection for students!
    We are looking at using recycled materials for Earth Day, so it’s a trifecta of connections.
    Thanks for sharing access!

    1. Fantastic to hear this, Amy! Kudos for teaching and helping students learn more about art during these times. We appreciate your feedback!

    2. Lizabel Stella

      Hi Amy, we thought you might be interested to know about our upcoming online Q&A around Madam C.J. Walker which is taking place on Tuesday, June 16, 2020 at 5pm CST.

      If you’d like to register for this free event, you can do so here: https://bit.ly/blantoncc11zoom We hope you can join us!

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