
Starry Crown
John Biggers
John Biggers, American, born 1924
1987, Acrylic on canvas, 59 1/2 x 47 1/2 inches
Dallas Museum of Art, Museum League Purchase Fund
About the Artist
John Biggers was born in 1924 in Gastonia, North Carolina.
He was the seventh child in his family, and when he went to college
at Hampton Institute in Virginia he planned to study plumbing.
During his first year there, he enrolled in an art class taught by
an influential art educator, Viktor Lowenfeld. Lowenfeld was an Austrian
Jew who had been forced to leave his country because of Nazi persecution.
Professor Lowenfeld encouraged his students to learn about the
culture and creativity of their own heritage, and he introduced
John Biggers to African sculpture and to works by other African-American
artists. Biggers recalls that at the time he thought the work was
ugly, unlike anything I had seen before.
After leaving Hampton Institute, Biggers went to Pennsylvania State
University where he earned his master's degree and later, his doctoral
degree. In 1949, Biggers moved to Houston, Texas, where he became the
founding chairman of the art department at Texas Southern University,
then called Texas State University for Negroes. He held that position
for thirty-four years, and during those years Biggers committed himself
to teaching young, black artists.
In 1957, John Biggers made his first trip to Africa. He had hoped
for some time to visit the land of his ancestors, and with the help
of a grant from UNESCO, he was able to travel to West Africa. From
this trip Biggers developed Ananse: the Web of Life in Africa and
89 drawings that were a visual diary of his travels. During his
stay, he tried to photograph and sketch all that he saw: men and
women in the markets, the shrines, fishermen, boys and girls, and
people involved in activities of everyday life.
About the Art
In Starry Crown, the patterns reflect images and symbols from
African life and culture. The geometric shapes, seen in the
background and foreground, resemble traditional patterns of kuba
textiles and the patterns in quilts made by African-American women.
These images are the images of Biggers' childhood and his African
heritage. He uses the quilt as a metaphor for the meaning of the
African and African-American experience. He refers to their
geometric patterning and the other geometric shapes that he includes
in much of his work as "sacred geometry."
The name Starry Crown comes from the line of an African-American
spiritual. Stars, surrounded by the color blue, appear above the
women as a reference to heaven. The woman in the center is making a
star-like shape with string held in her mouth and hands.
The string represents the spoken word that passes traditions and
knowledge from one generation to another. For Biggers, women represent
the continuation of tradition; they are a symbol of cosmic power,
traditional knowledge, and creative power. The women on either side
of the central figure are creating a cradle with the string. This
action symbolizes creativity and is a reference to string games
played by children who had no other toys. The quilt itself refers
to women's creativity and maternal giving, since quilts, made from
scraps, frequently were the only "gift" that an African-American
woman could afford to make for her family.
Additional Information
Visual symbols are images that represent a concept, an idea, or
a quality. For example, an image of a lion might represent courage.
Biggers includes many visual symbols in Starry Crown and his other
work:
Stars: Stars can represent light, especially heavenly light,
wisdom, and nobility.
Quilts: A quilt can be a protective, sheltering cover, but can
also represent the care mothers provide for their children.
Strings: As the strings flow from mouth to hands and to mouth and
hands again, they can symbolize the passing of words from person to
person and from generation to generation.
Pots or kettles: Used for cooking and for washing clothes,
they symbolize the nourishment and purification.
A spider: Spiders are characters in many myths and legends from
cultures around the world. They are also spinners of webs, just as
story tellers can be spinners of tales. Cloth is spun to make
fabric for garments and for the quilts that are so prevalent in
Biggers paintings.
A cow and two goats: Biggers says that these animals represent
animals present at the birth of Jesus.
Canoes or boats: Boats can carry people from one place to another
on rivers and seas. They can represent a journey, perhaps to safety
or through life.
The three women: The women are dressed in costumes of three of the
major cultures of Africa: Benin, Egypt, and Dogon. They can symbolize
motherhood and continuity.
About the Time and Place
During the height of the Civil Rights movement in the mid-sixties,
interest in African culture was an important part of the lives of
African-Americans who hoped to develop a sense of pride and purpose
within their communities. Many black artists went to Paris or other
European cities or to New York during those turbulent times. After
Biggers' trip to Africa in 1957, he returned to Texas.
He said,
"I'm a guy who didn t go to New York. My only obsession
has been and still is to try to portray the meaning of African-American
life in the South...I'm interested in the spiritual aspiration of Black
people; how their spirit soars above the mundane and the material and all
their problems...It s been a study of the meaning of vegetation, the
landscape, the weather, the color of the South, the color of the people...
the meaning of religion, the whole cultural pattern."
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