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The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art

San Francisco
San Francisco, CA,
202-491-5521

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The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art

  • Welcome
  • ABOUT
  • Artists (A-J by Last Name)
  • Artists (K-Z by Last Name)
  • Contact
   Still Life with Purple Plum    Oil on canvas  18x32 inches  Year unknown  Signed  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

William Sylvester Carter (1919-1996)

Born in St. Louis, Missouri, William Carter (1909-1996) moved to Chicago in 1930, situating him in the midst of the Depression-era migration of African-Americans from the American South. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and the University of Illinois and was part of the WPA's Illinois Federal Art Project from 1937-39 and the Illinois Art and Craft Project (1943). He was an instructor at the South Side Community Arts Center of Chicago. While part of the WPA, he worked alongside Eldzier Cortor, Charles White, Earl Walker, Charles Davis and other noted African-American artists. Carter worked in several media including pastel, watercolor, ink, gouache and oils. Like many artists of the 1930s, he also painted in tempera, a medium that lent itself to the narrative scenes and murals of the 1930s and which was then enjoying a revival. Carter worked in both representational and abstract styles. Among his most successful paintings are his still lifes and nudes which, while representational, are nevertheless influenced by his interest in abstraction. Executed in a loose style with bright colors, they playfully interpret shapes and perspective.

Carter exhibited in the Chicago area at the Art League, Hull House, South Side Community Art Center, the Art Institute, and the American Negro Exposition of 1940. He also exhibited at Atlanta University, Howard University, the Library of Congress, Smith College, City Art Museum of St. Louis, and the Boston Institute of Modern Art. His works are in collections at the Art Institute of Chicago, the DuSable Museum of African-American Art, and the South Side Community Art Center. 

Biography courtesy of Roger King Gallery of Fine Art, www.antiquesandfineart.com/rking

William Sylvester Carter (1919-1996)

Born in St. Louis, Missouri, William Carter (1909-1996) moved to Chicago in 1930, situating him in the midst of the Depression-era migration of African-Americans from the American South. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and the University of Illinois and was part of the WPA's Illinois Federal Art Project from 1937-39 and the Illinois Art and Craft Project (1943). He was an instructor at the South Side Community Arts Center of Chicago. While part of the WPA, he worked alongside Eldzier Cortor, Charles White, Earl Walker, Charles Davis and other noted African-American artists. Carter worked in several media including pastel, watercolor, ink, gouache and oils. Like many artists of the 1930s, he also painted in tempera, a medium that lent itself to the narrative scenes and murals of the 1930s and which was then enjoying a revival. Carter worked in both representational and abstract styles. Among his most successful paintings are his still lifes and nudes which, while representational, are nevertheless influenced by his interest in abstraction. Executed in a loose style with bright colors, they playfully interpret shapes and perspective.

Carter exhibited in the Chicago area at the Art League, Hull House, South Side Community Art Center, the Art Institute, and the American Negro Exposition of 1940. He also exhibited at Atlanta University, Howard University, the Library of Congress, Smith College, City Art Museum of St. Louis, and the Boston Institute of Modern Art. His works are in collections at the Art Institute of Chicago, the DuSable Museum of African-American Art, and the South Side Community Art Center. 

Biography courtesy of Roger King Gallery of Fine Art, www.antiquesandfineart.com/rking

   Still Life with Purple Plum    Oil on canvas  18x32 inches  Year unknown  Signed  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

Still Life with Purple Plum

Oil on canvas

18x32 inches

Year unknown

Signed

Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

   Seascape    Oil on canvas  11 1/4x 15 1/2 inches  1952  Not signed  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio   

Seascape

Oil on canvas

11 1/4x 15 1/2 inches

1952

Not signed

Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

 

   Missouri Snow    Pastel  18x32 inche  Year unknown  Signed  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio   

Missouri Snow

Pastel

18x32 inche

Year unknown

Signed

Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

 

 Fear  Pastel  13x10 3/4 inches  c. 1950  Signed  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

Fear

Pastel

13x10 3/4 inches

c. 1950

Signed

Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

   Sorrow all the Cats Are In    Mixed media on panel  18x24 inches  1978  Signed and dated  Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

Sorrow all the Cats Are In

Mixed media on panel

18x24 inches

1978

Signed and dated

Photo credit: John Wilson White Studio

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