Excerpt:
...Purvis Young’s predicament
is that he is always categorized as an outsider, yet
he exhibits none of the more discernible traits usually
associated with this kind of artist. He is no naif or
individual working in extreme isolation, dissociated
from contemporary urban life; he makes no claims to
visionary status nor does he attempt to pass off his
work as religious or spiritual meditation; his process
of production is not obsessive or even meticulous. Contrary
to what the term ‘outsider’ often conjures up, Young
casually refers to Van Gogh, Rubens, Rembrandt, and
Cézanne, to National Geographic magazine and public
television documentaries, when speaking of his paintings.
He has spent countless hours in libraries perusing art
history books and catalogues, acquiring a serendipitous
education that is not lost in his work. Numerous commentators
have drawn connections between his paintings and the
collage and assemblage aesthetic of the Dadaists and
Surrealists, as well as the combine paintings of Robert
Rauschenberg and early Jasper Johns. To this we can
add a distant kinship with Italian arte povera. The
naiveté is ours if we pretend that Young is simply an
uncouth, primitive painter, completely unaware of the
history of the medium and some of its major practitioners.
On the other hand, we would be hard-pressed to pass
off Young as a contemporary artist, attuned to the current
discourses and trends that inform the mainstream art
world; he is clearly unaffected by them. More appropriate
for the work Young produces is a third category – a
way of working that concerns itself with local truths
and everyday realities, that speaks to and of the artist’s
immediate environment but remains somehow a part of
a larger narrative. I’m not sure what to call this group
of artists but I know it includes the work of people
like Horace Pippin, Elijah Pierce, Nellie Mae Rowe,
Lonnie Holley, and even of certain artists entrenched
in the contemporary art world such as Leandro Drew,
Gary Moore and Faith Ringgold. All these artists, although
different in many ways, produce work that speaks directly
and in particular (although not exclusively) to an African-American
audience. Their projects are informed by the experiences
and plights that this audience has lived through and
continues to live through.