Good morning POU Family! It’s Thursday and this week’s theme is highlighting African-American Painters. Today, we are going to highlight the painter David Huffman.
David Huffman (born 1963) is an American painter and installation artist. He is known for works that combine science fiction aesthetics with a critical focus on the political exploration of identity.
David Huffman was born and raised in Berkeley, California. His mother was an activist who supported various local causes in the 60s, including the Black Panthers for whom she designed the iconic Free Huey flag.
Huffman was exposed to science fiction early, in the form of television shows such as Star Trek, Astroboy and Shogun Warriors.
Huffman studied in New York and San Francisco receiving his MFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts.
Huffman says “I mine events, whether historical or contemporary, from various sources, where my metaphoric stories of conflict, enlightenment, fear, and resolution combine…each body of work is discreet in materiality but continues the dialog.” Works combine and recombine pop culture iconography across eras, formal explorations in the medium of paint, science fiction aesthetics and identity politics in an evolving lexicon that interrogates “the politics of race, activism, and painting itself”.
Huffman’s early work includes African-American space travelers he calls “traumanauts”. These figures enter futuristic landscapes where paint combines with images of cosmic debris and ecological decay to create surreal tableaux.
Later works continue to explore the politics of race in works that limit his iconography to the image of the basketball in combination with an abstracted deep space created of layered tones of browns and blacks.
The basketball is also central to Huffman’s installation work. His Basketball Pyramid works feature sculptures created of hundreds of basketballs built into life-sized pyramids.
Huffman’s solo exhibitions include Worlds in Collision at Roberts & Tilton Gallery in 2016, Everything Went Dark Until I Saw Angels, in 2014, and Floating World, in 2012, both at Patricia Sweetow Gallery, Out of Bounds at the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery in 2011, Dig it! at Patricia Sweetow Gallery in 2008, and Land of the New Rising Sun at Lizabeth Oliveria Gallery in 2005. His first solo was Broadsides in 1995 at the Los Angeles’ Jan Baum Gallery.