Excerpt:
...As an elderly evangelist who has spent much of his
adult life as a street preacher, Prophet William J.
Blackmon aims to evoke a strong response to his compelling
religious paintings. And there can be no doubting the
power and appeal of his visual messages: during the
summer of 2000, at an exhibition of Blackmon's work,
I watched as a young boy first studied one of the paintings,
and then, with his brother, broke into a spontaneous
jubilant song and improvised a dance in response to
the image. Rarely have I experienced such an impromptu
but sincere reaction to art.
A lively and commanding visionary self-taught painter,
Blackmon was born in 1921 in Albion, Michigan. At the
age of eight he foretold the death of a neighbour after
hearing her 'death rattle.' But his inclination toward
prayer did not become apparent until he enlisted in
the army during the Second World War. He served with
the 585th Engineers Company from 1943 to 1945, receiving
several campaign ribbons and six bronze battle stars.
(1) Blackmon eventually moved to Chicago, where he openesd
a shoeshine stand near the Christian Hope Missionary
Baptist Church. He was cured of acute chronic gastritis
after the preacher said that he and anyone else in the
congregation would be healed by God if they would only
have faith in his divine power.
God Fearing Foundry Workers,
1987, 18 x 20 inches, latex and enamel paint on plywood.
Who is Right, You or the
Indian, 1989, 20 x 48.5 inches, latex and enamel paint
on wood