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One of ten children, Benny Andrews was born on November 13, 1930, in Plainview, Georgia – a light skinned, blue-eyed, blond haired baby. James Orr (“Mr. Jim”), his paternal grandfather, was the son of a prominent white plantation owner. His paternal grandmother, who was the midwife at his birth, was Jessie Rose Lee Wildcat Tennessee. And, like her, his maternal grandparents, John and Allison Perryman, were of mixed Black and Native American heritage. His father, George Andrews, was a self-taught artist known as the “Dot Man,” who never lived more than ten miles from Plainview and never left Georgia. In contrast, his mother, Viola Perryman Andrews, loved travel and was an advocate for education who encouraged her children to write and to draw daily.
After becoming the first member of his family to graduate from high school, Benny attended Fort Valley State College supported by a scholarship. He was not allowed to attend the University of Georgia, in nearby Athens, nor enroll in Lamar Dodd’s well-known art classes there, due to the color of his skin. In 1954, after serving as a military policeman in the Korean War, he used the GI Bill to attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, studying under Kathleen Blackshear. No longer constrained by the racial laws of the South, he entered an art museum and saw original masterworks for the first time in 1954, an experience that brought tears to his eyes.
After graduating in 1958, Benny moved to New York, where he maintained a studio for the rest of his life. Despite limited connections to the city’s art world, by 1962 he began to exhibit regularly at Bella Fishko’s Forum Gallery. By the late-1960s, influenced by the Civil Rights Movement, and troubled by the social, racial and gender inequities he discovered in the art world, he entered a period of social and cultural activism which was reflected in his art. In 1969, he co-founded the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition and participated in marches outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, demonstrating against the exclusion of women and artists of color from those institutions. Thereafter he was often labeled a “protest artist.”
From 1970 through 1976, he executed the Bicentennial Series, a project devoted to depicting the complex history of African-Americans for the American Bicentennial. After exhibiting that project, he returned to the studio and to his position as a member of the Queens College art faculty – a position he held for almost three decades. Beginning in 1982, he served as Director of the Visual Arts Program for the National Endowment for the Arts, a position which brought him increased national stature. He resigned in 1984, feeling he had accomplished what he could and anxious to return to his studio.
In 1984, Benny built a studio outside of Athens, Georgia, where he was able to work more closely with his Georgia family. He encouraged his father, “The Dot Man,” to expand his art production to include painted canvases. From 1984 until 1996, when George Andrew’s died, he worked to advance the recognition of his father’s art.
In 2001, after living and working in Manhattan for more than forty years, Benny Andrews and Nene Humphrey renovated and moved into a new studio and residential structure in Brooklyn. The primary focus in the studio during his last years was the Migrant Series, inspired by his reading of writers such as Flannery O’Connor and Langston Hughes as well as his rediscovery of The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck. Each of the three major components of this project was planned to reflect one aspect of his own mixed heritage – African-American, Scotch-Irish and Cherokee – and was to be related to a major migration in American history, beginning with the Dust Bowl migration to California, continuing with the Cherokee “Trail of Tears” migration, and concluding with the Great Migration of Southern Black Americans to the North. In 2006, after repeated visits to New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, he decided to add a concluding chapter to his American Migrant series, devoted to the mass migration of New Orleanians that emerged in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The evolution of the project was suspended when he was diagnosed with the cancer which led to his death on November 10, 2006.
Benny Andrews was an artist who contributed significantly to the development of a contemporary dialogue in American Art during the second half of the 20th century. He was also deeply influential upon the early development of Ogden Museum of Southern Art, and he was the Museum’s first artist member of the Board of Trustees, as well as the Museum’s first artist-in-residence. He was even involved in defining the very Mission of the Museum. His life and work continues guide the Mission of Ogden Museum of Southern Art, and to inspire generations of students and visitors to the museum.