Excerpt:
...Mary Frances Whitfield was born on April 14, 1947
in Birmingham, Alabama. Festering in violence and discrimination,
Birmingham then was about to be catapulted into national
prominence as the most segregated city in America, meeting
demands for racial justice with increasing resistance
and horrifying bloodshed. Mary Whitfield’s paintings
are born of those years of revolution and change, but
were most closely linked to stories and memories shared
by her grandmother. Small-scale, figurative works, they
movingly depict stories of love and despair, injustice
and perseverance. They often refer to an earlier history
in the American South, but their message is timeless,
telling stories of the struggles still faced by African-Americans
in 21st-century America.
Mary Whitfield began painting in the early 1970s, when
her two older sons were toddlers. She had no formal
art training but was a talented needlewoman and thought
she might also have some ability as a painter. Using
materials from around her home, such as house paint
on pieces of plywood, she created a series of domestic
scenes, but considered it only a hobby and gave it up
to return to school. After graduation, she worked as
a secretary, and was eventually promoted to supervisor
of library services. In the late 1980s, with her three
sons grown, she purchased some watercolour paints and
canvas board and returned to painting.
Narrative:
Sweet Potato Pie, 2001, 3.75 x 20.37 inches, watercolour,
gouache on Arches paper, Collection Drs Earl & Jeri Changar