2003.28
Double Cherry Blossoms
Artist
Alma Woodsey Thomas
(Columbus, Georgia, 9/22/1891 - 1978)
Title
Double Cherry Blossoms
Creation Date
1973
Century
late 20th century
Dimensions
60 in. x 40 1/8 in. (152.4 cm x 101.92 cm)
Object Type
painting
Creation Place
North America, United States
Medium and Support
acrylic on canvas
Credit Line
Gift of halley k harrisburg, Class of 1990, and Michael Rosenfeld
Copyright
Public Domain
Accession Number
2003.28
Artist Alma Thomas stated: “Painting released me from the limitations of the past and opened the door to progressive creativity.” The limitations to which she refers is the expectation that all works produced by Black artists had to contribute to a “black aesthetic” or serve to counter hegemonic representational views of the Black community. Thomas’s choice to employ abstract expressionism in her process was a refusal of these expectations, allowing her a freedom for self-expression and individual nuance. An avid student of color theory and modernism, most of Thomas’s works are inspired by scenes in nature. Her palette and technique reflected her long studies of color’s complexity and the watercolor medium. Though born in Georgia, her family relocated to Washington, D.C., seeking relief from racial tension. She took her hometown’s celebrated Japanese cherry trees as a source of inspiration for this work.