Podchaser Logo
Home
Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Released Friday, 1st March 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000, de Young

Friday, 1st March 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Transcript

Elizabeth Catlett was a trailblazer. Born in Washington, DC, in 1915, she spent her childhood hearing stories of enslavement and resistance told to her by her grandmother. Fueled by her history and heritage, Catlett dedicated seven decades to a career that saw her sculpt, draw, and print dignified and uplifting portraits of African American people. The sculpture Stepping Out from the year 2000 is one such example.

Let’s go back to Catlett’s beginnings. A student of Howard University, a historically Black research university in Washington, DC, in the 1930s, Catlett was taught by Lois Mailou Jones, a key painter and figure in the Harlem Renaissance. Later, she would study with the American Realist Grant Wood, and it was he who encouraged her to make art about what she knew best: her own story.

Catlett made prints of sharecroppers, mother and child sculptures, and drawings of men and women to inspire people at a time of political and social unrest. Through her art, she advocated for social change with key political messaging.

She based herself in the US, but due to growing suspicions of Communist leanings, in the 1940s, Catlett relocated to Mexico City. She joined the radical printmaking collective the Taller de Gráfica Popular and remained in Mexico for the rest of her life.

Stepping Out is a near life-size sculpture of a woman and was completed towards the end of her career. Positioned with one foot forward, as if moving — or perhaps “stepping out” — into the future, she wears a formfitting dress and low heeled shoes on her feet, as if to show and own her femininity.

When I first saw this work at the de Young, I looked around me at the other works displayed here. In the modern and contemporary art gallery, we see paintings of workers, stories exploring American Realism and urbanization, and the tensions between city and rural life. Many of these artists in the space grew up at a similar time to Catlett, but I love how the curators made Stepping Out the room’s focal point — as if punctuating it with the voice and image of a woman going about her day with poise and elegance.

So many of our museums are populated with sculptures of Grecian-style women — such as the nude or seminude Aphrodite, goddess of love and sex. But here, Catlett shows us a new icon: the everyday woman, an icon for a more hopeful, and more real, liberated world.

Just as Catlett wrote of her art: “It must answer a question, or wake somebody up, or give a shove in the right direction — our liberation.”

Image: Elizabeth Catlett, Stepping Out, 2000. Laminated mahogany, 64 1/2 x 21 x 17 1/2 in. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Museum purchase, The Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr. Art Fund, Inc., Beta Upsilon Boulé - Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, The Links, Incorporated - San Francisco Chapter, Fine Arts Museums Tribute Funds, Ms. Del M. Anderson and Mr. John Handy, Mrs. Marguerite Archer, Rena Merritt Bancroft, PhD; Ms. Jo-Ann Beverly, Rev. “J” Edgar Boyd, Mrs. Mary Pat Cress, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Geist, Maxwell C. and Frankie Jacobs Gillette, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Johnson, Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lathan, Mr. and Mrs. Terry E. Perucca and Dr. Alma Ribbs, 1999.199 ©️ Catlett Mora Family Trust / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Show More
Rate

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Episode Tags

Do you host or manage this podcast?
Claim and edit this page to your liking.
,

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features