CLEMENTINE HUNTER (1887-1988)
CLEMENTINE HUNTER (1887-1988)
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PROPERTY FROM THE WILLIAM LOUIS-DREYFUS FOUNDATION
CLEMENTINE HUNTER (1887-1988)

Sunday on Cane River, Louisiana, 1955

Details
CLEMENTINE HUNTER (1887-1988)
Sunday on Cane River, Louisiana, 1955
oil on plywood
32 ¾ x 59 ¼ in.
Provenance
Dr. Mildred Hart Bailey, Natchitoches, Louisiana
William Louis-Dreyfus, Mount Kisco, New York, 1987 (acquired from the above)
The William Louis-Dreyfus Foundation, Mount Kisco, New York, 2016 (gifted from the above)

Brought to you by

Cara Zimmerman
Cara Zimmerman Head of Americana and Outsider Art

Lot Essay

Clementine Hunter painted vibrant scenes reflecting the society of the Louisiana plantation on which she spent most of her life. Her father, Janvier Reuben, moved his wife and seven children to Melrose Plantation in Cane River Country in northwest Louisiana during Hunter's teenage years and she would remain there throughout her life. The owner of Melrose was interested in reviving local arts and crafts and the home became a thriving mecca for art. François Mignon, Melrose's curator, encouraged Hunter's creativity and collected tubes of paint and other materials discarded by visiting artists for her use. Her works, depicting picking cotton and pecans, washing clothes, baptisms and funerals, are considered important documentation of plantation life in the early twentieth century.

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