Material
Wood
About
Wonderful wood carved and painted sculpture of an alligator by folk artist Isaac Smith in the 1980's. Signed by artist on foot.
Artist Biography
Isaac Smith was born in 1944 in Winnsboro, LA. He is one of the most prominent African-American visionary artists in the United States today. Throughout his childhood, Smith explored the bayous and studied the wildlife of his native Louisiana. At the age of 10, he saw a man carve an unbroken chain out of a single broomstick; the future artist immediately took up the knife to carve one himself. For the next twenty years, he whittled in his free time and during periods of unemployment. For the last three decades, Smith has carved and painted wildlife full-time. He is a prodigious creator, forever exploring nature through his work. Smith claims that his animals belong to a single kingdom, one which he will occupy and share upon his death. Smith carves his creatures anatomically correct; he creates them in mated pairs, and/or gives them offspring. In "Black Folk Art and the Politics of Folk Art" (1982), anthropologist Gene Metcalfe describes artists’ references to otherworldly qualities as a remnant of "communal aesthetic whose workings go beyond rational understanding and knowing." Kingdoms, much like spirit-driven works, express a long tradition of community beliefs and interactions.
Dimensions
H 8.5 in. x W 42 in. x D 9 in.