Beverly McIver – Beverly Holding Father, Cardrew

$60,000

SKU: 30070

Artwork Description

Beverly McIver – Beverly Holding Father, Cardrew

Dimensions: 59.5 x 48″ unframed
Year: c. 2015
Medium: oil and mixed media on canvas

Beverly McIver has always used imagery related to childhood, such as clowns, balloons, toys, and costumes in her iconography. Here, she renders herself at her birthday, holding an image of her beloved father, Cardrew, in her hands. The circular motif recurs in this painting in the clock, balloons, and crystal ball-type image of Cardrew.

McIver only met her father when she was 16 years old, but she came to love him deeply. She bought a house for him, and ultimately became his caregiver when he approached the end of his life.

Beverly McIver is an icon of reconciliation and resilience. Growing up in the projects of Greensboro, North Carolina in the 1960’s, the child of a single mom with a mentally disabled sister in the household, odds were stacked against her. She was bussed across town from the projects to a wealthy white neighborhood for high school, yet she watched a man be shot by the KKK outside the window of her own house. She attended graduate school at Penn State where there was so much attrition by Black students that her advisors purposely kept her at school for an additional year before awarding her degree. At Penn State, she met artist Faith Ringgold, who shared the struggle of being a female Black artist, and became a lifelong friend and mentor. McIver’s vulnerable, poignant paintings allow us to see inside her lived experience. It is incumbent upon us to do so, to include her in the art historical canon and to comprehend a history that has been previously ignored.

McIver will no doubt be regarded as one of the most important Black female painters of the 20th/21st century.

Curator, Kim Boganey, who curated Beverly McIver’s first exhibition in Arizona more than a decade ago was the curator and exhibition organizer of Beverly McIver’s retrospective titled “Beverly McIver: Full Circle”, which premiered at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary art, and which is touring nationally.

Boganey was the Director of Public Art in Scottsdale before moving on to be the director of the Ontario Museum. She also authored the monograph “Beverly McIver: Full Circle” with essays included by top African American feminist writer Michelle Faith Wallace, Faith Ringgold’s daughter.

Smithsonian and Metropolitan Museum of Art fellow and leading African American art historian, Richard Powell, also contributed an essay to Boganey’s book on McIver. Boganey lectures about Beverly McIver’s artwork around the country and is a foremost expert on her work.