
In addition, the museum holds a notable array of more than 2,000 works by African American artists. Going to Church (shown left) and many other artworks by William H. Johnson form a key component of the collection. This painting depicts an African American family going from their work in the fields to the spiritual support of the church. Johnson's childhood in rural South Carolina provided a deep wellspring of imagery as he began painting the history, folklore, and spirit of the African American experience. Similarly, artists such as Robert Scott Duncanson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Horace Pippin, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Loïs Mailou Jones, and Sam Gilliam tell stories of the South, the Great Migration, Harlem and the Jazz Age, and the struggle for full acceptance as Americans and as artists.
The museum began actively collecting Latino art about a decade ago. Almost 500 pieces represent rich traditions from colonial religious works to woven textiles. The museum collects artworks by both U.S.-born and immigrant artists, including Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans and Chicanos, Cuban Americans, and Latin Americans. The museum has acquired paintings and sculptures by contemporary artists such as Carmen Lomas Garza, Patssi Valdez, Carlos Alfonzo, Vik Muniz, and Luis Jiménez. Valdez, a Chicana who grew up in Los Angeles, painted The Magic Room (shown right) and said, "My goal is to keep the paintings alive, to give them a sense of movement." Her painted domestic interiors often function as self portraits—intimate glimpses into internal thoughts and feelings.
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