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Hayward Oubre Self-Portrait

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@ National Portrait Gallery

Description

“I fought racism with my art,” Hayward Oubre asserted. Light-skinned, Oubre could have “passed” for white, but he proudly refused to do so. When a student in his printmaking class at the University of Iowa made a racist remark about him, he responded with a print of a black man attacking a snake that was meant to represent the white race. In this self-portrait, made in the same class, Oubre stressed the tan tone of his skin by using buff paper and leaving a thin coating of ink on the plate. He exag- gerated the size of his eyes but avoided the gaze of the viewer, perhaps suggesting his alienation. Lines underneath the eyes evoke premature sags and possibly point to the stress of his having lived in segregated campus housing.After earning an MFA in 1948, Oubre spent his career teaching, and around 1960, he began making wire sculptures that have earned increased recognition in recent years.“Yo luché contra el racismo con mi arte”, declaró Hayward Oubre. Tenía la piel clara, y podía haber “pasado” por blanco, pero dignamente se negó a hacerlo. Cuando un estudiante de su clase de grabado en la Universidad de Iowa hizo un comen- tario racista sobre él, Oubre respondió con una obra donde mostraba a un hombre negro atacando a una serpiente que representaba a la raza blanca. En este autorretrato, realizado en la misma clase, Oubre acentúa el tono bronceado de su piel con papel beige y dejando una delgada capa de tinta...
Type:
Image
Format:
Etching
Rights:
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; the Ruth Bowman and Harry Kahn Twentieth-Century American Self-Portrait Collection
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Record Contributed By

National Portrait Gallery

Record Harvested From

Smithsonian Institution