Page loaded successfully. Showing keywords for Roy Ferdinand.
Artist Keywords
Keywords page for Roy Ferdinand ((1959 - 2004)), known for Mod naive urban genre. Showing associated keywords and tags.
Roy Ferdinand KEYWORDS
1959 New Orleans, Louisiana - 2004. Known for: Mod naive urban genre.
Roy Ferdinand was a self-taught artist who chronicled street life in New Orleans' impoverished African-American neighborhoods for fifteen years, documenting its violent subculture and making... Read full biography
Roy Ferdinand was a self-taught artist who chronicled street life in New Orleans' impoverished African-American neighborhoods for fifteen years, documenting its violent subculture and making portraits of residents who had no choice but to share these mean streets. Ferdinand, who compared himself to... Read full biography
Roy Ferdinand was a self-taught artist who chronicled street life in New Orleans' impoverished African-American neighborhoods for fifteen years, documenting its violent subculture and making portraits of residents who had no choice but to share these mean streets. Ferdinand, who compared himself to a battlefield sketch artist, worked in ink markers, colored pencils and children's watercolors on poster board. His style, with its bodies slightly out of proportion, multiple vanishing points, and... Read full biography
Roy Ferdinand was a self-taught artist who chronicled street life in New Orleans' impoverished African-American neighborhoods for fifteen years, documenting its violent subculture and making portraits of residents who had no choice but to share these mean streets. Ferdinand, who compared himself to a battlefield sketch artist, worked in ink markers, colored pencils and children's watercolors on poster board. His style, with its bodies slightly out of proportion, multiple vanishing points, and tilted buildings, has been described as a metaphor for New Orleans in the 1980s and 1990s, when the crack epidemic raged and the city had the country's highest murder rate. Ferdinand was represented in New Orleans by Barrister's Gallery in his... Read full biography
Roy Ferdinand was a self-taught artist who chronicled street life in New Orleans' impoverished African-American neighborhoods for fifteen years, documenting its violent subculture and making portraits of residents who had no choice but to share these mean streets. Ferdinand, who compared himself to a battlefield sketch artist, worked in ink markers, colored pencils and children's watercolors on poster board. His style, with its bodies slightly out of proportion, multiple vanishing points, and tilted buildings, has been described as a metaphor for New Orleans in the 1980s and 1990s, when the crack epidemic raged and the city had the country's highest murder rate. Ferdinand was represented in New Orleans by Barrister's Gallery in his lifetime. His prodigious body of work is held in private collections, galleries, and museums across the country.
Roy Ferdinand - Artist Info
About Roy Ferdinand: Keywords
Keywords (14)
Art Media
Art Style
- •Folk Art, Naive, Primitive
- •Naive, Childlike, Intuitive
- •Sophisticated Naive, Primitive
Art Subject
- •Black, African Culture, Figure, Genre, Civil Rights
- •Folk Art, Folk Lore
- •Genre, Human Activity, Daily Life
- •Urban Scene, City Genre
Chronology
- •Late 20th Century After 1950
Added Description
- •Genre Specialty
