BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)
BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)
BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)
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BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)
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BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)

Goat, Camel, Lion and Figures

Details
BILL TRAYLOR (circa 1853-1949)
Goat, Camel, Lion and Figures
reverse signed Charles Shannon at center; bears original Shannon label D-151 EXCITING EVENT reverse upper right
graphite on repurposed card
14 x 22 in.
Executed circa 1939.
Provenance
Ricco Maresca Gallery, New York
Eugenie and Lael Johnson, Chicago
Christie's, New York, 18 January 2019, lot 1011

Brought to you by

Cara Zimmerman
Cara Zimmerman Head of Americana and Outsider Art

Lot Essay

This iconic work by Bill Traylor is important from an historical standpoint, as it is the drawing Traylor rendered throughout a series of now-famous images by Charles Shannon. These photographs, some of which show Traylor surrounded by children observing his drawing, are among the most poignant records of the artist working, and the oft-reproduced and perhaps most famous portrait of Traylor includes this work in a near-completed state.

After a lifetime on a plantation, former slave Traylor moved to Montgomery, Alabama. There, from a doorstep on Monroe Street, he composed starkly modernist images of lively animals, elaborate constructions and active people. This wonderful, abstracted drawing reveals Traylor’s masterful understanding of space and hints at his use of the posters, packaging and visual culture that surrounded him, as the camel on the lower left of this work likely draws from the illustration on Camel Cigarette cartons and posters popular in advertising of the day.

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