Artist: Purvis Young
Title: Celebrating Life in the Sunshine
Medium: Paint on Canvas
Size: 53" x 27"
Edition: Original
Inscription: Signed lower left
Condition: In the style of found art with an intentionally weathered appearance. Expected imperfections include heavy creasing, unfinished edges, and marks and staining on the back.
Documentation: Includes a Certificate of Authenticity from the Purvis Young Foundation
Purvis Young's paintings are both symbolic and even direct; the symbols speak for themselves without hiding behind objects, subjects, words, and colors. "Celebrating Life in the Sunshine" combines figurative and natural elements, two of the most common motifs seen throughout his body of work. Young uses scale as an important method of storytelling, and while much of his artwork features a cacophony of figures, the emphasis on a singular figurative element is unusual for a piece of this size.
Purvis Young is an impressive storyteller, using every tool available to him to share his narrative. The themes in his art highlight important values and share everyday stories of his community. The stories Young shares can be frought with difficulty, from growing up in segregated and violent neighborhoods to navigating the art world as a perceived outsider, but they always include an idea of hope.
"Celebrating Life in the Sunshine" has an intentionally weathered appearance in the style of found street art. Expected imperfections include heavy creasing, unfinished edges, and marks and staining on the back. "Celebrating Life in the Sunshine" is signed on the lower left and includes a certificate of authenticity from the Purvis Young Foundation.
This piece is currently not framed. The photo showing the frame is a mockup of a frame and what it would look like framed. If you would like the piece framed we can work with our local framer at our discounted price to pick out the perfect frame for your home.
About Purvis Young
Self-taught artist from a poverty stricken neighborhood of Miami, Purvis Young transformed his fraught yet inspired life experience into a unique and compelling visual vocabulary. Through a range of powerful symbols, he articulated the struggles and myths of his heritage.
Drawing from a range of sources such as documentaries, art books, American history and spiritual folklore, Young crafted an immense visual language comprised of motifs such as white horses offering freedom, halos signifying angles, pregnant women with the hope of tomorrow, processions and incarceration, among others. Telling simple, yet powerful stories of everyday life, the artist expressed his community and ethnic background. Using found objects from his neighborhood, such as cardboard, discarded political signs, used paper, doors, plywood scraps, metal sheets, carpet remnants, he transformed these surfaces into richly colored and highly expressionist paintings. Although Young is often associated with Outsider Art, his style could best be described as “Magic realism.”
In 2016, his life and work were the subject of a feature documentary entitled Purvis of Overtown. He was a recipient of the Artists/Fellowship grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and was included into the Florida Artist Hall of Fame in 2018. His work is found in the collections of the American Folk Art Museum, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the High Museum of Art, the National Museum of African American History and Culture, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, among others.
The subjects of Purvis Young celebrated and historicized the neighborhood where he had spent his entire life. Even though his works chronicled struggle, they always contained an underlining hope for a better future.
Purvis Young was born in 1943 in Overtown neighborhood of Miami, Florida and died in 2010 in Miami. In 2015, almost 400 pieces of Young’s art were donated by The Bass Museum of Art to the permanent collection in the Black Archives History and research Foundation of South Florida located in the heart of Purvis’ hometown.