Description:

Mose Ernest Tolliver (American, 1919-2006). House paint on plywood, n.d. Signed along lower right. A wonderful painting of a curious cactus-like creature by self-taught Outsider Artist Mose Tolliver, also known as Mose T - just like the signature on his paintings which usually features a backwards "S" as we see in this example. Seemingly comprised of a large prickly cactus form - with its succulent body covered by spikes and thorns - this bizarre being looks out with not one but two pairs of eyes and is rendered in a colorful palette of claret, pink, black, white, coral, and mint green against a white background with a decorative black border featuring periodic scallops. Finally, a soda pop or beer can tab is attached to the verso - an endearingly quirky signature of Mose T's works. Size: 29.7" L x 21" W (75.4 cm x 53.3 cm)

Mose Tolliver was one of twelve children born to sharecroppers Ike and Laney Tolliver in the Pike Road community near Montgomery, Alabama. He only attended school until the third grade. According to Toliver, "I didn't like school. I remember I wanted to be outdoors working with my older brothers or even stacking wood … One thing I remember about our farm house - it was just a shack, but my Mama had pictures all over the walls." His family moved to Montgomery, Alabama in the thirties where he worked odd jobs to help support the family. He married his childhood friend Willie Mae Thomas in the forties, and the couple had thirteen children. Mose did not begin creating art until the sixties after suffering a serious injury to his legs when a load of marble fell from a forklift as he was sweeping in a furniture factory. Art provided Tolliver with solace from the pain and boredom that resulted from this tragic accident.

In the first article published about Tolliver he declared, "I'm not interested in art. I just want to paint my pictures." Nevertheless, the art world took notice. For example, Dr. Robert Bishop, former Director of the Museum of American Folk Art, stated about Mose's artworks, "You can hang him beside a Picasso, and you have the same kind of creativity and deep personal vision." (Montgomery Advertiser, February 1981). One year later, Toliver's work was included in the blockbuster exhibition entitled, "Black Folk Art in America 1930-1980" at Corcoran Gallery in Washington D.C. thus introducing him to the art world at large. Tolliver's artwork has been exhibited at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Philadelphia College of Art, the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, the American Folk Art Museum in New York (a retrospective), and the Corcoran Gallery of Art. His works have been collected by Birmingham Museum of Art, Akron Art Museum, Smithsonian's National Museum of American Art, and University of Michigan Museum of Art.

Provenance: ex-private Bishop Family Trust collection, the Trust of the late Bill Bishop, a noted antiquarian with shops in Scottsdale, Arizona and Allenspark, Colorado, USA, acquired before 2010

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#174695

  • Condition: Signed on lower right. Some natural weathering to the wooden surface. Unpainted on verso. A soda pop or beer can tab is attached to the verso, presumably to serve as a suspension hook, which we would not advise. Overall excellent condition.

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September 29, 2022 8:00 AM MDT
Louisville, CO, US

Artemis Fine Arts

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