Hello, My name is Emily Holtrop and I am the director of learning and interpretation at the museum. Today I will be reading the “The Life of David Driskell” timeline.
During the “Harlem Renaissance,” philosopher Alain Locke coins the term “The New Negro” to describe the racial pride that accompanies economic independence and a sense of one’s heritage. Calls on African American artists to define an aesthetic rooted in the study of African art.
Stock market crashes, ushering in the Great Depression.
David C. Driskell is born in Eatonton, Georgia, to Rev. George Washington Driskell and Mary Lou Cloud Driskell.
The Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) is launched to support the fine arts. By its demise in 1943, it employs more than 10,000 artists.
Driskell family moves to Ellenboro, North Carolina, where they work as sharecroppers.
US enters World War II.
Graduates high school and enters into study of art at Howard University, Washington, DC, a historically Black institution, under James Lesesne Wells, Loïs Mailou Jones, James A. Porter, and Morris Louis
Marries Thelma Deloatch, with whom he has two daughters
Ralph Ellison’s novel Invisible Man wins the National Book Award.
Wins scholarship for summer at Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, Madison, Maine, and develops lifelong relationship with the school
Landmark case “Brown vs. (Topeka, Kansas) Board of Education” in which the United States Supreme Court outlaws segregated public schools
Earns a Bachelor of Arts degree in fine arts from Howard University. Teaches at Talladega College, Talladega, Alabama (until 1962), where he has his first solo exhibition
Black activist Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat to a white rider on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus. Bus boycotts culminate in the 1956 US Supreme Court ruling against discrimination on buses.
Paints Behold Thy Son in response to the lynching in Mississippi of fourteen-year-old Emmett Till for allegedly flirting with a white woman in his family’s grocery
Pursues Master of Fine Arts degree at The Catholic University, Washington, DC. Wins awards for his paintings and graphic arts at Atlanta University Annuals
Purchases property in Falmouth, Maine
Director of Barnett-Aden Gallery, Washington, DC, a non-profit that promoted African American artists (not exclusively). Solo exhibition there (1963)
Associate professor, Howard University; becomes acting department chair and acting gallery director
200,000 protesters march on Washington, DC, in demand of equal rights. Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivers “I Have a Dream” speech
Summer. Travels in Europe on Rockefeller and Harmon Foundation fellowships
The Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act are passed to prevent discriminatory practices.
US enters the Vietnam War (ends 1973)
Activist Kwame Ture (born Stokely Carmichael) coins the term “Black Power.”
Professor of art and department chairman, Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
Travels to West Africa: Senegal, Ivory Coast, Ghana, and Nigeria. Serves (in 1970) as a visiting professor in Ile-Ife, Nigeria
Collaborates on book Black Dimensions in Contemporary American Art
Curates a Smithsonian exhibition on the work of William H. Johnson. Awarded US government grants to lecture throughout Africa and Europe
Shirley Chisholm is the first Black presidential candidate nominated by a major party.
Visiting professorship and exhibition of his work at Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine
Curates traveling exhibition Amistad II: Afro-American Art for Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee
Curator and catalogue essayist for the landmark exhibition Two Centuries of Black American Art at Los Angeles County Museum, which travels to Atlanta, Dallas, and Brooklyn. Includes Horace Pippin, Christmas Morning, Breakfast (Cincinnati Art Museum)
Professor of Art, University of Maryland, College Park
Fellow at Yaddo (artist residency), Saratoga Springs, New York. Exhibition David Driskell: A Survey opens at University of Maryland Art Gallery.
Alice Walker wins the Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Color Purple.
Federal holiday established in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Curates traveling exhibitions Hidden Heritage: Afro-American Art, 1800-1950 for Bellevue Art Museum, Bellevue, Washington; Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America for Studio Museum in Harlem, and others
Dedication of stained-glass windows he designed at Peoples Congregational United Church of Christ, Washington, DC. Also designs windows for Talladega College chapel (1996)
In Los Angeles, four white police officers are videotaped beating Rodney King, a Black man.
Million Man March in Washington, DC, counters negative stereotypes of Black men and fosters solidarity.
Cincinnati Art Museum hosts the traveling exhibition Narratives of African American Art and Identity: The David C. Driskell Collection. Driskell gives the keynote lecture at the symposium.
President Bill Clinton presents Driskell with the National Humanities Medal.
Opening of the David C. Driskell Center for the Study of Visual Arts and Culture of African Americans and the African Diaspora at the University of Maryland
Receives Governor’s Arts Award, Maryland. Launches David C. Driskell Series of African American Art with publisher Pomegranate
Exhibitions of his work at University of Maryland and Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockport (traveled)
Barak Obama is elected the 44th President of the United States.
The National Museum of African American History and Culture opens in Washington, DC.
Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Driskell dies in Maryland at age eighty-eight.
George Floyd’s brutal murder by Minneapolis police officers leads to protests worldwide.
Release of HBO documentary Black Art: In the Absence of Light, in which interviews with Driskell figure prominently