Rose Piper

Rose Piper
Born Rose Theodora Sams
(1917-10-07)October 7, 1917
New York City, New York, U.S.
Died May 11, 2005(2005-05-11) (aged 87)
Connecticut, U.S.
Education Hunter College
Known for Painting, Textile design

Rose Piper (October 7, 1917–May 11, 2005) was an American painter best known for her semi-abstract, blues-inspired paintings of the 1940s. In the 1950s, out of financial necessity, she became a textile designer. For nearly thirty years she worked as Rose Ransier, designing knit fabrics. She resumed painting and exhibiting in the 1980s.

Early life and education

Rose Piper was born Rose Theodora Sams in New York in 1917. She grew up in the Bronx, where her father was a public schoolteacher who taught Latin and Greek. She attended Hunter College, majoring in art and minoring in geometry, graduating in 1940. From 1943 to 1946 she attended the Art Students League of New York, where she studied with Vaclav Vytlacil and Yasuo Kuniyoshi. It was during this period that the poet Myron O'Higgins introduced her to Sterling Brown, who encouraged her growing interest in blues music.[1] Brown was the author of "Ma Rainey" (1932), arguably the quintessential blues poem;[2][3] O'Higgins, his student at Howard University, had also written poetry on blues themes, such as "Blues for Bessie" (1945).[4]

Career

Blues-inspired paintings

The Death of Bessie Smith by Rose Piper, 1947

In 1946 she received a Julius Rosenwald fellowship and spent the summer traveling in the American South, "imbibing" the atmosphere, as she put it, and studying blues music.[1] As a New Yorker, she had not grown up listening to the blues; she said in an interview years later, "I ran out and got all kinds of recordings and listened to them. I worked at it." Her research inspired a series of increasingly abstract, blues-themed paintings. Back Water (1946), inspired by Bessie Smith's "Backwater Blues",[3] is more figurative and literal in its approach than the paintings that followed. By 1947 Piper had adopted the Picasso-influenced, flat, geometric style seen in Slow Down, Freight Train and The Death of Bessie Smith (shown).[5]

According to critic Graham Lock, this semi-abstract style was a fitting choice for the series because the blues themselves are stylized, often using exaggeration (such as "pouring water on a drowning man") to convey strong emotions.[6] Piper never embraced pure abstraction, however, preferring to keep the human figure at the center of her work. Her purpose in creating art was political: to fight injustice "the best way I know howby putting it on the canvas."[5]

Her work attracted national attention in the fall of 1947 when she gave her first solo exhibition at the Roko Gallery in New York. Titled Blues and Negro Folk Songs, the exhibition featured 14 paintings based on folk and blues songs. The show was a major success: praised by critics, it was held over for an extra week, and most of the paintings were sold.[1] At that time she was one of only four African-American abstract painters to have had solo shows in New York. The other three were Romare Bearden, Norman Lewis, and Thelma Johnson Streat.[7]

She scored another win in 1948 when her work was included in the 7th Annual Exhibition of Paintings, Sculpture and Prints by Negro Artists. Sponsored by Atlanta University, it was one of the most prestigious venues for black artists; fellow exhibitors included Richmond Barthé, Robert Blackburn, Jacob Lawrence, and Hale Woodruff. Piper's Grievin' Hearted was awarded the prize for Best Portrait or Figure Painting.[1]

Piper's career peaked in the late 1940s. She kept a studio in Greenwich Village, and exhibited in the ACA Gallery.[8] Her work was reviewed in the New York Times, Art Digest, and ARTnews.[9] Her circle of acquaintance included James Baldwin, Billie Holiday, and Langston Hughes. Charles Alston was a friend and mentor. Recalling those years in a 1989 interview, she said, "I had the greatest time. The world was at my feet."[1]

Even as her blues-themed paintings won her attention and acclaim, Piper was wary of being stereotyped as a black painter limited to "black" themes. It was partly for this reason that, on receiving a second Rosenwald grant in 1948, she opted to work in Paris rather than continue her exploration of the American South.[10]

Textile design

When Piper returned from Paris, a series of financial and family misfortunes forced her to put her painting career on hold. For a time she ran her own greeting card business. She then worked as a textile designer, using the name Rose Ransier. Over the next three decades she built a successful, albeit anonymous, career in fashion, while raising her two children and caring for ailing family members. Her minor in geometry gave her an edge in her new line of work: she was able to design patterns on graph paper that did not need to be adjusted for the knitwear machines. In 1973 she won the Knitted Textile Association's First Annual Knit Competition. When she retired in 1979, she was a senior vice president.[11]

Later work

I Want Yuh to Go Down, Death, Easy / An' Bring My Servant Home by Rose Piper, ca. 1988

In the 1980s Piper returned to painting. This time she adopted a whole new style, influenced by her years in textile design: instead of semi-abstraction and a subdued, melancholy palette, the later paintings combined a meticulous attention to detail and bright acrylics. As influences, she cited Flemish School painters Hans Memling and Jan van Eyck, and the medieval Book of Hours tradition.[12]

She still drew inspiration from African-American music, and her sense of political purpose had not changed. In 1989 she had a solo exhibition in New York, sponsored by the Phelps Stokes Fund. The centerpiece, titled Slave Song Series, was a set of ten 12 x 9in miniatures based on lines from spirituals. Half were set in contemporary urban locales; for example, I Want Yuh to Go Down, Death, Easy / An' Bring My Servant Home (shown) is set in the 96th Street subway station. Describing her motivation for the series, she wrote that "the current state of many inner-city blacks is not unlike the desperate situation of the slave ancestors."[13]

Personal life

Piper had two children, a son and a daughter, and was an aunt of the conceptual artist Adrian Piper.[10][14] She died of a stroke in a Connecticut nursing home in 2005.[12]

Selected exhibitions

See also

References

Notes

Sources

Further reading

External links

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