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Bidon Community Print & Design Studio
Bidon Community Print & Design Studio
About Jacques
Services
Printing & Graphic Design
Print Workshops
Gallery
Shop
Contact Us
About Jacques
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Shop Edward Mitchell Bannister
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Edward Mitchell Bannister

$50.00

3 color letterpress and lithograph print, 11 in x 17 in. Signed and numbered on back.

2024 Art Exhibit at AS220, Providence Public Library and Providence City Hall Galleries.

For a small city in the smallest state, Rhode Island has produced outsized Black artists in a variety of genres. In the 19th century, artists such as Sissieretta Jones, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, and Christiana Cartreaux Bannister brought music, visual art, and style to the city.

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3 color letterpress and lithograph print, 11 in x 17 in. Signed and numbered on back.

2024 Art Exhibit at AS220, Providence Public Library and Providence City Hall Galleries.

For a small city in the smallest state, Rhode Island has produced outsized Black artists in a variety of genres. In the 19th century, artists such as Sissieretta Jones, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, and Christiana Cartreaux Bannister brought music, visual art, and style to the city.

3 color letterpress and lithograph print, 11 in x 17 in. Signed and numbered on back.

2024 Art Exhibit at AS220, Providence Public Library and Providence City Hall Galleries.

For a small city in the smallest state, Rhode Island has produced outsized Black artists in a variety of genres. In the 19th century, artists such as Sissieretta Jones, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, and Christiana Cartreaux Bannister brought music, visual art, and style to the city.

EDWARD MITCHELL BANNISTER 

(November 2, 1828 – January 9, 1901) 

Edward Mitchell Bannister was a Canadian–American oil painter of the American Barbizon school. Born in Canada, he spent his adult life in New England in the United States. There, along with his wife Christiana Carteaux, he was a prominent member of African-American cultural and political communities, such as the Boston abolition movement. Bannister received national recognition after he won a first prize in painting at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. He was also a founding member of the Providence Art Club and the Rhode Island School of Design.

Bannister's style and predominantly pastoral subject matter reflected his admiration for the French artist Jean-François Millet and the French Barbizon school. A lifelong sailor, he also looked to the Rhode Island seaside for inspiration. Bannister continually experimented, and his artwork displays his Idealist philosophy and his control of color and atmosphere. He began his professional practice as a photographer and portraitist before developing his better-known landscape style.

Later in his life, Bannister's style of landscape painting fell out of favor. With decreasing painting sales, he and Christiana Carteaux moved out of College Hill in Providence to Boston and then to a smaller house on Wilson Street in Providence. Bannister was overlooked in American art historical studies and exhibitions after his death in 1901, until institutions like the National Museum of African Art returned him to national attention in the 1960s and 1970s.

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