From Left to Right: John Outterbridge, Alonzo Davis, and Dan Concholar (1971)
1 2016-11-15T15:23:32-08:00 Vanessa Todd d44a174f5c0bf51566a0822429f8a0c533cf973b 12834 2 John Outterbridge, Alonzo Davis, and Dan Concholar (1971) - from LA Object plain 2016-12-01T15:42:31-08:00 Allison Wendt 5f609f9e327122da9a07a273744d9e6d158702fcThis page has paths:
- 1 2016-11-15T15:28:29-08:00 Kailee Stovall e823ac3a96f225f888ac5f74bc901add983ccdcf Woman with Flowers Jennifer Keane 3 Marie Johnson, 1968, Mixed Media, 36 x 24, San Francisco Art Commission, San Francisco, CA. plain 2016-12-06T16:21:04-08:00 Jennifer Keane 585455368ba9baefcc126fd1c8f4bd3f64c3e50d
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- 1 2016-11-15T15:36:14-08:00 Vanessa Todd d44a174f5c0bf51566a0822429f8a0c533cf973b Dr. Yvonne Cole Meo and John Outterbridge Vanessa Todd 8 Dr. Yvonne Cole Meo and John Outerbridge with Prohibition, Containment series (June 1969) plain 2016-11-15T16:04:26-08:00 Vanessa Todd d44a174f5c0bf51566a0822429f8a0c533cf973b
- 1 2016-11-15T16:07:47-08:00 Vanessa Todd d44a174f5c0bf51566a0822429f8a0c533cf973b Traditional Hang-Up Vanessa Todd 2 photo of Traditional Hang-Up, assemblage piece done by John Outerbridge, metal, 1969, 31" x 25" plain 2016-11-15T16:07:52-08:00 Vanessa Todd d44a174f5c0bf51566a0822429f8a0c533cf973b
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John Outterbridge Bio
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Artist Bio John Outterbridge
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John Outterbridge (b. 1933 Greenville, NC) is a Los Angeles based artist working primarily in assemblage. Outerbridge has been an influential educator, community activist, and participant in the Black Arts movement in Southern California throughout his ongoing career. He took up this role soon after moving to Los Angeles upon graduating from the Academy of Art in Chicago. Much of Outterbridge's work deals with oppressive realities the black community faced (and continues to face) in Los Angeles, including quickening impoverishment as a result of deindustrialization, police brutality, job discrimination, and a deficit of educational and artistic resources. The 1965 Watts Uprising greatly influenced Outterbridge particularly because of his relationship to Noah Purifoy whose work in the exhibition 66 Signs of Neon marked the beginning of a public commitment to community building and his assemblage work.In the early 1970’s Outerbridge worked with the city officials to develop an arts education program at the already existing Compton Communicative Art Academy (CCAA) which received state and local funding to teach community classes in across all art disciplines. The Academy collapsed in 1975 due to inadequate funding after white flight from the area created an economic vacuum which made many public projects in Watts and Compton impossible.
In 1975 Outterbridge succeeded Noah Purifoy as art director of the Watts Towers Art Center. The Watts Towers Art Center held enormous sway in the black community in L.A. as an alternative form of self-governance and self-determination. Community involvement meant that Outterbridge was not far removed from black radicalism. Education was a contested arena as proven by the shooting of Southern California Black Panther Party president Alprentice Carter at UCLA by another black radical organization when he was helping coordinate leadership for a new Black Studies Program. When asked about his involvement in arts education programs in Compton and Watts, Outterbridge has said, “‘in a way, we were all panthers.’”
On one hand, Outterbridge’s work as an educator fit neatly within revolutionary black nationalist constructs of community organizing and empowerment; revolutionary nationalists focused on separatism and a somewhat uniform internal identity to achieve their goals. On the other hand, Outterbridge's actual work, with its African motifs and references to black mythology/spiritual practice, aligns more closely with cultural nationalism whose ideology rested largely in reconstructing a cultural and historic lineage which was stripped of black people during slavery. The division between revolutionary and cultural nationalism was a source of significant conflict and debate within the black community in L.A. and nationwide; however, the distinction between the two which put them at odds was somewhat artificial. Outterbridge assumes a unique place at the junction of revolutionary and cultural nationalism. His career and work reveal a symbiosis between these two branches of black activism during the Civil Rights era.
Outterbridge continues to live and work in L.A. and recently showed his exhibition called Rag Man the gallery Art + Practice in Leimert Park. -
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John Outterbridge Interview
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m (CAAM). Outterbridge, an innovative assemblage artist, is also well known and venerated as a teacher and arts administrator.
Outterbridge, served as director of the Watts Towers Arts Center from 1975 to 1992. Prior to that, he was artistic director of Communicative Arts Academy in Compton. He was an art instructor and fine arts installer at the Pasadena Museum of Art from 1967 to 1972. He also has taught at Cal State Dominguez Hills, Pasadena City College and is founder of GOCART (Gallery of Children’s Art).
Known primarily for his sculpture using recycled materials and for frequently addressing social and political issues, Outterbridge credits his father with teaching him to value discarded materials. He began painting while in the army. After leaving the service, he attended the Chicago Academy of Art and the American Academy of Art, also in Chicago. A native of Greenville, North Carolina, Outterbridge left Chicago for Los Angeles in 1963. He gave up painting for sculpture after settling in Los Angeles. Exhibited and recognized throughout the world, Outterbridge has received numerous awards, including the 1987 National Conference of Arts Educators Award; a 1988 Fulbright Fellowship; and in 1994, he received the J.R. Hyde Visiting Artist Fellowship at the Memphis Institute of the Arts, J. Paul Getty Fellowship for the Visual Arts, National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship and an honorary doctorate from
Mark Steven Greenfield currently serves as director of the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery for the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.
Admission to this lecture and all CAAM events and exhibitions is free. CAAM researches, collects, preserves and interprets for public enrichment the history, art and culture of African Americans. Located at 600 State Drive in Exposition Park, the museum is open to the public Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm, and Sundays 11am-5pm. For information, call 213.744.7432 or visit www.caamuseum.org.
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John Outterbridge, Alonzo Davis, and Dan Concholar
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Photo of John Outterbridge, Alonzo Davis, and Dan Concholar from LA Object (1971)
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