We Are Made of Stories: Self-Taught Artists Featured in the National Collection 

Get a sneak peek at SAAM’s upcoming exhibition opening July 1 

SAAM
June 29, 2022
Media - 2016.38.43R-V - SAAM-2016.38.43R-V_2 - 126225
Sister Gertrude Morgan, Fan, ca. 1970, paint and ink on card, Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Margaret Z. Robson Collection, Gift of John E. and Douglas O. Robson, 2016.38.43R-V

Artists who learned from family, community, and personal journeys have always been a presence in American art, but it was not until the late twentieth century that the collective force of their vision turned the tide for good, bringing them fully into the art-world mainstream. This era was especially significant for artists who were marginalized in multiple ways. These creative individuals witnessed social revolutions from civil rights to disability rights and made art that asserted both their presence and perspectives. 

We Are Made of Stories: Self-Taught Artists in the Robson Family Collection, a new exhibition at SAAM, examines how, despite wide-ranging societal, racial, and gender-based obstacles, the creativity and bold self-definition of untrained artists became major forces in American art. 

Margaret Z. Robson embraced art that reflected diverse and personal journeys, and supported museums and scholars in making it more available to the public. Her son, Douglas, now carries these efforts into the future. In 2016, he donated ninety-three artworks from his mother’s collection to SAAM. The exhibition features selected works from this original gift, as well as thirty-two promised gifts from his own collection, and a major painting by Dan Miller that he donated to SAAM in 2022.  

Title wall for "We Are Made of Stories"

Installation views of the exhibition We Are Made of Stories: Self-Taught Artists in the Robson Family Collection, 2022, Courtesy of Smithsonian American Art Museum. All photos by Albert Ting

“The works of art in the Robson Family Collection give voice to people who faced challenge, oppression and often extreme marginalization in their lifetimes, but by leaving their imprint in the form of art, moved the needle toward a more enlightened age, a more humanistic moment,” said Leslie Umberger, curator of folk and self-taught art. “This project amplifies unique perspectives and argues that multivocality is essential for a full and genuine picture of the United States. It looks at the solitary paths many of these artists traveled, as well as the collective ground they gained by asserting their personal views of the world and telling their own story.” 

Installation pairing of a wooden elephant and dog

Some of the artists included in the exhibition are:  

BILL TRAYLOR   

Visitors view three works of Bill Traylor in the exhibition gallery.

Bill Traylor told the story of his life and experience from enslavement to Jim Crow segregation in evocative drawings and paintings that described his memories, as well as a rising Black culture in mid-century America. 

Read more about Traylor.   

NELLIE MAE ROWE  

Two colorful artworks on display in the gallery

Rowe made vivid mixed-media drawings of hybridized creatures and African American women enmeshed in color and abundance, consistently depicted as proud, creative individuals brimming with love and generosity. Rowe took control of her own narrative (and that of Black women) by rejecting negative stereotypes and creating images of Black beauty and joy—a radical act of selfhood.  

Read more about Rowe. 

THE PHILADELPHIA WIREMAN  

Wire-wrapped sculptures

The mixed-media objects by this never-identified artist were discovered in a Philadelphia alley in the late twentieth century. Carefully wrapped bundles of wire and found objects from an urban environment, these palm-sized, talismanic artworks speak of day-to-day survival through perseverance and creativity as action. 

JUDITH SCOTT   

Wrapped sculptures

Judith Scott found her artistic medium of fiber at Creative Growth Art Center, a California organization dedicated to helping individuals with developmental disabilities flourish through art. Although Scott’s enigmatic, yarn-bound sculptures are not autobiographical in a traditional sense, they embody an alternate language sought and found, a way for her to convey her emotions, and describe who she was.     

For more than fifty years, SAAM has been a leader in advocating for a diverse populist voice within the context of what is traditionally considered great art. The museum’s representation of art by folk and self-taught artists began in 1970 with the acquisition of James Hampton’s The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations’ Millennium General Assembly. Today the collection is among the most significant anywhere.  

This story is drawn from exhibition texts and the catalogue. We Are Made of Stories: Self-Taught Artists in the Robson Family Collection is on view through March 26, 2023 in Washington, DC. Learn more about this exhibition and see additional artworks in our online gallery

Categories

Recent Posts

Detail of Phoebe Kline. She is sitting in front of orchids and smiling.
Docent Phoebe Kline began at SAAM in 1974 and she's still going strong
A photograph of a woman in front of artwork
More visitors and new exhibitions highlight a season of change.
 Stephanie Stebich, SAAM's Margaret and Terry Stent Direction in the museum's Lincoln Gallery. Photo by Gene Young. 
Stephanie Stebich
The Margaret and Terry Stent Director, Smithsonian American Art Museum and Renwick Gallery
Marian Anderson and symbols that surround her life
William H. Johnson portrayed the singer in multiple paintings, including in his Fighters for Freedom series.