|
Excerpt:
South Carolina native Sam Doyle opened the door of his
Washington, DC hotel room and invited Jane Livingston
and John Beardsley inside. The co-curators of the much-anticipated
exhibition Black Folk Art in America 1930-1980 were
hosting a preview for the members of the Corcoran Gallery
of Art later that evening and they very much wanted
the artist to attend.
The day before, January 13, 1982, Doyle and the other
honourees had attended a reception at the Corcoran.
He had the sublime pleasure of seeing his artworks formally
presented for the first time and shaking the hand of
First Lady Nancy Reagan. He was enjoying one of the
best days of his life, when, a few miles away, Air Florida
Flight 90 plunged into the icy Potomac. Six people survived
the crash, but only five were rescued, each one pulled
from the frozen river in a daring helicopter-assisted
rescue documented by area television crews and replayed
since on virtually every channel.
|
The resultant ebb and flow of emotion had shaken the
wary artist. Despite their reassurances, Doyle would
not leave his room. He was not attending the member's
event, he was not attending the opening - he was going
home to the familiar environs of St Helena Island.
Filled with patriotism, Doyle refreshed a number of
his artworks with red, white and blue house paint. Rambling
Rose, First Black Driver, Penn Roser House and others
were bathed in patriotic hues. More than ten years had
passed since his retirement, and the museum-like display
that overflowed the yard of his small, two-storey house
and adjacent workshop had evolved into the St Helena
Out Door Art Gallery.
|