Represented by BlackCommentator.com
            
            For purchasing details please contact 
            
            Larry Richardson at [email protected]
            Mixed Media with Collage of Historical
            Documents.
            Price: $ 6,000 USD
            Giclee available, 32" x 32"
            Limited Edition of 75 on Arches paper
          
          
            Giclee Print Price: $ 1,200 USD
            What is a Giclee?
            A Giclee (pronounced Zhee-Clay) is a 
              very high end digitally produced archival quality print. Giclees 
              are printed on archival substrates, such as Arches Cold Press watercolor 
              papers, Somerset watercolor papers or specially prepared canvases, 
              with archival, light fast inks, at a very high resolution. Depending 
              on the medium of the original work, giclees are printed on paper 
              or canvas. Watercolor paintings render very well on the watercolor 
              papers, and oil paintings printed as canvas giclees have the rich 
              tonal quality of original oil paintings. Canvas giclees are also 
              coated with a special finishing media to protect the surface. Canvas 
              giclees are stretched and framed as one would display an original 
              oil painting. Watercolor giclees are typically framed behind glass, 
              as one would do with an original watercolor painting.
            Artist Statement
            Since I returned to painting in 1995 
              I have wanted to express the beauty in our African heritage. To 
              show the diversity that the Diaspora gave us in various other cultures 
              in the world. I have tried to present our culture as seen not only 
              in the context of the pain and suffering inflicted on us in the 
              days of slavery but to bring forward those cultural contributions, 
              and legacies we left in Spain, France, Italy and other places of 
              the world. Truly, that is what the Diaspora was about... the dispersion 
              of culture.
            When looking at the many histories on art and researching 
              many of the famous old masters, our image is present even in medieval 
              times. Anti-Black racism in the modern sense was unknown in the 
              Middle Ages; Blacks were simply part of the human race.
            In the latter Middle Ages there were even black saints 
              and one of the Magi was accurately shown as black. Most literature 
              on Black American artists is approached as though it was a form 
              of expression separate from the so-called majority culture. This 
              critical isolation in terms of art comes from the tradition of classifying 
              people and their culture by race. I feel the crucial issue is the 
              quality of work and it’s relevance to the society in which 
              it was created.
            As an artist it is not my color that gives me the 
              inspiration or the capacity to produce a desired result, but the 
              ability to be sensitive to the various conditions of life that face 
              all mankind.
             My first showing of some of these paintings was called 
              “Lost Images Found Paintings from the Soul” reinforcing 
              the importance of our culture in various parts of the world.
            Three shows followed after that. One expanded 
              on cultural isolation and the other specifically was to present 
              a new approach to Afro-American figurative art merging the contemporary 
              and the classical forms. 
             The objective of my vision is to heighten the 
              awareness of those who view figurative images in my art and to stimulate 
              one’s thought and imagination. The end result is a series 
              of paintings and drawings that form cultural links between our past 
              and our future.