Both Sides Now: The Spirituality, Resilience, and Innovation of Elizabeth Talford Scott: Goya Contemporary Gallery, Baltimore
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Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, 1992Fabric, rocks, beads, buttons, shells, sequins, ribbon, corduroy, metal, netting, thread, repurposed objects69 x 51 in. (175.3 x 129.5 cm)
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Lap Cushion, Circa early 1990sFabric, beads, buttons, ribbon, thread, repurposed silk and fiber ties19 x 20 in. (48.3 x 50.8 cm)
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Abstract #1, 1983Fabric, thread78 x 72 in. (198.1 x 182.9 cm)
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The Family of the Whosits, 1995Fabric, buttons, beads, rocks, thread, sequins, shells, netting, metal, pins57 x 50 in. (144.8 x 127 cm)
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Birthday, 1997Fabric, thread, knots, sequins, faux pearls, ribbon, tulle, netting62 x 55.5 in. (157.5 x 141 cm)
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Upside Downwards, 1992Fabric, beads, buttons, ribbon, rocks, thread59 x 52.5 in. (149.9 x 133.3 cm)
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Sick Eye, 1980Fabric, buttons, thread24 x 20 in. (61 x 50.8 cm)
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Infected Eye, 1979-1980Fabric, thread21 x 17.25 in. (53.3 x 43.8 cm)
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Rock Circle 2, 1993Fabric, rocks, buttons, beads, thread21.5 x 16 in. (54.6 x 40.6 cm)
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Birthday Quilt, 1994Fabric, silk ties, fiber ties, knots, thread, yarn60 x 52 in. (152.4 x 132.1 cm)
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Abstract 27, 1993Fabric, thread, plastic, beads, buttons, pins, yarn30.5 x 33 in. (77.5 x 83.8 cm)
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Bits and Pieces, 1995Fabric, beads, sequins, yarn, knots, buttons, metal, rocks, netting, thread53.5 x 53 in. (135.9 x 134.6 cm)
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Title Unknown, Circa early 1990sFabric, yarn, beads, thread11.5 x 24 x 6 in. (29.2 x 61 x 15.2 cm)
Goya Contemporary Gallery is pleased to present:
Both Sides Now: The Spirituality, Resilience & Innovation of Elizabeth Talford Scott
February 20 - April 21, 2023
Reception: March 16, 2023, 6:00-8:00pm
Curator: Amy Eva Raehse
Goya Contemporary Gallery is pleased to announce Both Sides Now: The Spirituality, Resilience & Innovation of Elizabeth Talford Scott on view from February 21 through April 21 with a reception held on March 16 from 6-8 pm.
Elizabeth Talford Scott (b.1916 - d. 2011) was born near Chester, South Carolina to Southern sharecroppers who worked on the land where their parents previously were enslaved. The sixth of fourteen siblings who lived on the Blackstock Plantation, Elizabeth quickly learned to repurpose commonly scrapped materials into useable resources.
Quilting was a familiar part of the black American experience, especially in the South. It was a keystone for innovation, upcycling, expression, and for passing historical narratives from one generation to the next. Talford-Scott honed her quilting skills at an early age, though her advancement within the medium would develop over many years, moving away from domestic function into improvisational, sculptural wall hangings that live squarely within the vernacular of Fine Art.
Migrating to Baltimore in the early 1940s, Elizabeth and Charlie Scott Jr. welcomed a daughter into the world -- the now celebrated artist and MacArthur Fellow Dr. Joyce J. Scott. During this era, Elizabeth worked in food services, as a hired caregiver, and as a mother devotedly caring for her own child.
With limited time in her demanding work schedule, Elizabeth took a hiatus from quilting, and it was not until her daughter was self-sufficient that the artist returned to her creative practice with dedication, vigor, and potency. Developing techniques that acknowledged her family history yet moved beyond, Scott began to innovate, creating fiber works that incorporated unconventional objects amassed in bright, bold, and lively compositions with heavily layered surfaces of organic, unstructured shapes much richer in detail than many distinguished contemporary paintings.
Immersed and embedded within the lush surfaces of these works live personal and worldly narratives, and an alphabet of ancestral symbols that tell us as much about aesthetics as they do about the artist's history. Making references to flowers, animals, intergalactic astronomy, insects, sea creatures, monsters, fantastical beings, dreams, sky maps, superstitions, and good luck charms, Talford-Scott's objects converge in a cacophony of pure visual energy where commonplace materials metamorphose into lessons on abstract design informed by all that she could see and imagine.
During her lifetime, although she exhibited infrequently, Elizabeth presented her work in national venues including The Studio Museum of Harlem, NY; Museum of American Folk Art, NY; and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. In 1987, Elizabeth Talford Scott was bequeathed the Women's Caucus Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Visual Arts. In 1998, she was the subject of a retrospective exhibition curated by George Ciscle titled Eyewinkers, Tumbleturds, and Candlebugs: The Art of Elizabeth Talford Scott that opened at the Maryland Institute College of Art and traveled to the Smithsonian Institution's Anacostia Community Museum in Washington, DC among other venues. And while the artist frequently collaborated with her daughter to conduct workshops that aimed to teach techniques, her presence in the larger art world remained slim because at that time, there simply was close to no space carved out for black, female makers who worked in fibers.
Elizabeth Talford Scott died in 2011. In 2019, the estate management was awarded to Goya Contemporary Gallery. Later that year E.T. Scott was the joint subject of the exhibitions Hitching Their Dreams to Untamed Stars: Joyce J. Scott & Elizabeth Talford Scott at the Baltimore Museum of Art and Reality, Times Two: Joyce J. Scott & Elizabeth Talford Scott at Goya Contemporary Gallery. The following year, the gallery mounted the artist's first solo show titled Upside-Downwards. In 2021, Talford-Scott was the subject of the gallery's solo-artist booth at The Armory Show, NY and was subsequently listed as one of the top-10 MUST SEE booths [out of hundreds] by The New York Times coverage of the fair. As a result, major works have recently entered esteemed public collections such as the Philbrook Museum, Toledo Museum, Mint Museum, Baltimore Museum, and Museum of Fine Arts Boston, as well as prestigious private collections across the country.
Elizabeth Talford Scott's posthumous success points to the long-standing, systemic structures that failed to recognize the work of significant female makers in their lifetimes, yet encouragingly many institutions have newly incited reinvestigations into these overlooked, yet important artistic practices.
Talford-Scott's practice is unlike others, and she has been cited by a sundry of celebrated contemporary artists as an influence; counting her own daughter --Joyce J. Scott-- among those she inspired. Elizabeth Talford Scott's objects feel as fresh and relevant today as the days they were constructed, proving Scott a significant artist whose work was not only of her time but is timeless. In this way, the artist preserves the distinctive cultural heritage and storytelling that these extraordinary works embody, while sanctioning us to learn from them now, and in the future.
Both Sides Now: The Spirituality, Resilience & Innovation of Elizabeth Talford Scott reaffirms Goya Contemporary's commitment to represent the artist's estate and opens an exciting phase in chronicling the work of Elizabeth Talford Scott. In addition, the Estate is pleased to be working with the Baltimore Museum of Art, George Ciscle, and MICA's Exhibition Development Seminar on a broad initiative to further advance understanding around Talford Scott's artistic practice that will kick off later this year. © 2023
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