American Folk Art Museum
Address: 2 Lincoln Square
Columbus Avenue at West 66th Street
New York, NY 10023
Phone: 212-595-9533
Working hours:
Wednesday - Sunday 11:30am-6:00pm
Monday & Tuesday: Closed
Self Taught Art Across Time and Place
Since 1961, the American Folk Art Museum has been the leading institution shaping the understanding of art by the self-taught through its exhibitions, publications, and educational programs. As a center of scholarship, it showcases the creativity of individuals whose singular talents have been refined through personal experience rather than formal artistic training. Its collection includes more than eight thousand works of art from four centuries and nearly every continent—from compelling portraits and dazzling quilts to powerful works by living artists in a variety of mediums.
A CELEBRATION OF AN AUTHENTIC AMERICAN ART
Self-taught art, past and present, tells empowering stories of everyday life.
The field of American folk art was first defined at the turn of the twentieth century by collectors, professional artists, critics, dealers, and curators whose search for an authentic American art seemed to be finally answered in works that presented a nuanced picture of national identity, faith, progress, ingenuity, community, and individuality. Under the umbrella of “folk art” the field expanded to also include artists working in the present. For the last twenty years, the term self-taught has more regularly come to address these artists, whose inspiration emerges from unsuspected paths and unconventional places, giving voice to individuals who may be situated outside the social mainstream. Those individuals have been active participants in the shaping of American visual culture, influencing generations of artists and establishing lively artistic traditions.
Information taken from the website: folkartmuseum.org
Photo taken from the site: www.timeout.com/newyork/museums/american-folk-art-museum