{"data":{"id":"14995","type":"artist","attributes":{"id":14995,"topgoose_id":892,"tms_id":14995,"display_name":"Faith Ringgold","sort_name":"Ringgold Faith","display_date":"1930–2024","begin_date":"1930","end_date":"2024","biography":"\u003cp\u003eFaith Ringgold began her career as an artist and activist in the mid-1960s with large-scale paintings that bluntly addressed racism and sexism in America. In 1972, after seeing an exhibit of Tibetan thangkas hung from dowels, she started painting on unstretched canvases framed in printed fabric. This decisive turn toward the “story quilts” that would epitomize her work in the late 1980s was impelled by her engagement with feminism, her personal history, and her economic circumstances. “Feminist art is soft art, lightweight art, sewing art,” Ringgold has defiantly asserted. Like \u003ca href=\"/artists/20202\"\u003eJudy Chicago\u003c/a\u003e and other feminist artists in the 1970s, Ringgold was reclaiming traditions of craft for art.\u0026nbsp;\u003c/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e\u003ca href=\"/collection/works/44679\"\u003e\u003cem\u003eWomen Free Angela\u003c/em\u003e\u003c/a\u003e is a pivotal piece in Ringgold’s development, linking the racial discourse of her Black Light Series (1969) to the gender-charged paintings of the \u003cem\u003eFeminist Series\u003c/em\u003e (1972). Ringgold had begun using text in the earlier works, which embraced the black-is-beautiful movement in unstretched paintings rendered in subtle variations of black. Anticipating the triangular stitching in her quilts, the compositions were sometimes divided into chevron shapes, inspired by patterns in African textiles. The bold message of \u003ca href=\"/collection/works/44679\"\u003e\u003cem\u003eWomen Free Angela\u003c/em\u003e\u003c/a\u003e (a collage study for a poster), reflects support for the radical academic Angela Davis, who had been arrested and charged in 1970 in connection with a deadly armed takeover of a California courthouse. The triangulated display of black-nationalist colors, with kaleidoscopic reversals of ground and mirror-image text, suggests the interplay and mutual obligations of individual and collective, as well as racial and sexual liberation movements.\u003c/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e\u003cspan class=\"gray\"\u003eDana Miller and Adam D. Weinberg, \u003ca href=\"https://shop.whitney.org/products/whitney-handbook-of-the-collection\"\u003e\u003cem\u003eHandbook of the Collection\u003c/em\u003e\u003c/a\u003e (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 2015), 325.\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","on_view":false,"artport":false,"biennial":false,"collection":true,"ulan_id":"500063866","wikidata_id":"Q5431220","created_at":"2017-08-30T15:56:13.000-04:00","updated_at":"2026-04-10T07:03:06.567-04:00","links":{"artworks":"/api/artists/14995/artworks","exhibitions":"/api/artists/14995/exhibitions"}}}}