
Charles White
Lo, I am Black, c. 1967
Prix sur demande



Détails de l'œuvre
Estate of the artist
Heritage Gallery, Los Angeles
Private Collection, acquired from the above, c. 1984

Charles White’s Lo I Am Black (c. 1967) is a powerful, large-scale charcoal drawing that exemplifies the artist’s unwavering commitment to figuration and social consciousness at a moment when abstraction dominated the American art world. Executed with extraordinary technical control, the work presents a seated figure rendered in rich tonal gradations, the charcoal medium worked and reworked to achieve a sculptural presence. The figure’s direct gaze and grounded posture convey both quiet resilience and moral authority—what White himself described as “images of dignity.”
White’s labor-intensive process is central to the work’s emotional impact. Layers of charcoal build volume and depth, while softened edges and atmospheric shading create a sense of both immediacy and monumentality. The subject is not idealized but deeply human, embodying the lived realities of the African American experience that remained at the core of White’s practice. As the artist asserted, “Paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent,” underscoring his belief in art as a tool for social change.
The significance of Lo I Am Black is further reinforced by its strong provenance and visibility during the artist’s lifetime. The drawing appeared behind White in a 1967 Ebony magazine feature, situating it within the cultural discourse of the period. It later remained in the artist’s estate before entering the distinguished collection of Russell Goings, an early and dedicated supporter of White and Romare Bearden. Large-scale charcoal works such as this are among the most sought-after in White’s oeuvre, standing as enduring testaments to his technical mastery and profound humanism.
““I am interested in the social, even the propaganda, angle in painting; but I feel that the job of everyone in a creative field is to picture the whole scene. . . I am interested in creating a style that is much more powerful, that will take in the technical end and at the same time will say what I have to say. Paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent. If I could write, I would write about it. If I could talk, I would talk about it. Since I paint, I must paint about it.”— Charles White
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