History

Why the nude black ‘American girl’ became a loud political statement in 1974

American Girl, an art form that has reportedly been around for 500 years, is a portrait of a woman with black ink in her hair, body and face, set against some sort of domestic interior in the background.

The portrait was made in 1974 by Emma Amos during a period of social protests for LGBT rights, Native American rights, women’s liberation and Black power in the American society.

As people demanded to be recognized, artists at the time gave their full support to these protests not by marching and writing but via visual arts.

Many of them produced work that was blatantly political or radical, from sculpture to prints and posters, and Amos was one of them.

Though her American Girl work is believed to be “quieter and more personal work than many of its time,” Amos would later begin to make more overtly political work.

Born in 1938 during the civil rights and other social movements, Amos grew up in segregated Atlanta, before heading to New York in the 1960s, where a group of prominent black artists formed a collective called Spiral, to find out the best ways their work could support racial justice.

Civil rights movement in the 20th century — www.history.com

Amos was invited to join them, as the group’s youngest member, and only woman.

She subsequently had difficulties looking for a job since she was black and almost quit painting after she realized that most galleries hardly exhibited paintings of black people.

But by 1974, Amos had produced American Girl and had already begun breaking away from the Spiral group, casting doubts over whether truly the group had taken her seriously and were ready to open the door of opportunity to her.

Amos later joined feminist art collective Heresies, and subsequently became one of the anonymous art-world activists the Guerrilla Girls.

American Girl is part of a portfolio called “Impressions: Our World, Vol. 1,” which contains prints by seven black artists, both men and women, and produced at the Printmaking Workshop, run by the African-American artist Robert Blackburn.

These black artists created their own project to showcase their works which were often rejected by museums.

According to accounts, for the group’s exhibition in the 1960s, all the prints in the portfolio are in black and white, largely due to its racial connotation.

Amos, portraying the figure of a black woman as a form of social protest, was seen as rather daring.

For someone interested in the beauty of the black body, she even went further by depicting the American Girl in the nude.

The woman also had black ink in her hair, body and face which was also a choice Amos made as a form of “political statement.”

Amos was quoted by smithsonianmag.com: “we’re always talking about colour, but colours are also skin colours, and the term ‘colored’ itself—it all means something else to me. You have to choose, as a black artist, what colour to make your figures. . . butterscotch, brown or really black.”

American Girl, which further shows vertical stripes and white dots on a dark background signifying the American flag, has been described by Kelli Morgan, curatorial fellow at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts as “a representation of a black woman as the foundation of American society.”

On the surface, Amos’s work may seem normal or personal, but during the period in which it was made, there is no way one would look at it without finding in it a message.

Mildred Europa Taylor

Mildred Europa Taylor is a writer and content creator. She loves writing about health and women's issues in Africa and the African diaspora.

Recent Posts

9-year-old’s decision to give his only dollar to tycoon he assumed was homeless earns him free shopping spree

It was an act of goodwill with no intended expectation in mind. Donating his only…

4 hours ago

Meet Goldfields’ Catherine Kuupol, who is now the first woman general manager in Ghana’s mining history

Get to know Ms. Catherine Kuupol, a mineral engineer who has provided metallurgical technical services…

5 hours ago

Haitian-American teen gets accepted into 17 colleges with over $1 million in scholarships

Yves-Ann Comeau, 18, is gaining attention for her recent accomplishment of being accepted into 17…

8 hours ago

Solicitor says he was pinned down by court guards in ‘George Floyd manner’: ‘I was just trying to do my job’

Lawyers say they are considering a boycott of a court following an incident where up…

9 hours ago

Larry Demeritte becomes first Caribbean trainer at Kentucky Derby despite cancer battle

Larry Demeritte is the first Caribbean trainer to participate in the Kentucky Derby and the…

10 hours ago

Beyoncé’s name is regarded as a noun in French dictionary …here is why

She is celebrated globally for her groundbreaking work across the music and movie industry. But,…

13 hours ago

Aspiring medical doctor left brain-dead after allegedly being pushed into lake by friend

The family of an aspiring medical doctor is seeking justice after he was left brain-dead…

13 hours ago

Opal Lee awarded nation’s highest civilian honor ahead of receiving her 8th honorary degree

Once more, popular 97-year-old activist Opal Lee has received honor; this time, the President of…

14 hours ago

Career shoplifter gets 30 years after using soft-sided cooler to steal $20k worth of designer sunglasses

A Florida woman described as a career shoplifter was handed a 30-year prison sentence after…

14 hours ago

Cleveland agrees to pay $4.8M to family of teen fatally struck during high-speed police chase

The city of Cleveland, Ohio, has reached a $4.8 million settlement with the family of…

15 hours ago

‘It felt really scary’ – 14-year-old Nigerian ballet sensation on learning he’s largely blind in one eye

Anthony Madu, the 14-year-old Nigerian dancer from Lagos who gained admission to a prestigious ballet…

3 days ago

‘I remember the day when 56 dollars would change my life’: Wayne Brady reveals humble beginnings

Actor-host Wayne Brady recently opened up about his early financial struggles in his now thriving…

3 days ago

This 1-year-old loves to greet people at Target, so the store hired him as its youngest employee

Mia Arianna, also known as @mia.ariannaa on TikTok, helped her son become an honorary team…

3 days ago

Postman drives 379 miles at his own expense to deliver lost World War II letters to a family

Alvin Gauthier, a Grand Prairie USPS postman, recently went above and beyond to brighten a…

3 days ago

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed becomes Kenya’s first-ever female air force head

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed is the first female commander of the air force and…

3 days ago