Images of the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Images of the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Bands (Music) Musicians Festivals Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Special events Performing arts Music performance String bands String instruments Art Basket making African Americans Artists Painters Storytellers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Images of the 1983 Florida Folklife Festival | Images of the 1983 Florida Folklife Festival | Still Image | Singers Musicians Street vendors Artists Painters Weavers Net maker Toymakers Festivals Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Special events Performing arts Music performance Clog dancing Clogging Net makers Netmaking Minorcan Americans Signs and signboards Public speaking Dinners and dining Puppets Toys Dancers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Images of the 1983 Florida Folklife Festival
- Date
- 1983-05
- Description
- One proof sheet with 36 black and white images (plus negatives). Includes images of the Minorcan Folklife Area, the Food Pavilion, various festival signs, and puppets of the Shoestring Puppeteers; as well as Boltin with Beers-Burstine, the Suwannee River Cloggers, the Back Porch Cloggers, Tom Walton, and Lamey with his wooden toys.
- Collection
Painter Pharaoh Baker and Cypress furniture | Painter Pharaoh Baker and Cypress furniture | Still Image | Artists Furniture maker Fieldwork Sculpture Art African Americans Decorative arts Painting Furniture Cypress Chairs Material culture Wood craft Woodwork Painters | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Painter Pharaoh Baker and Cypress furniture
- Date
- 1979-05-27
- Description
- One proof sheet (plus negatives). Baker with his art work at his home (taken by Belland). Cypress furniture made by Whisnant (taken by Marhsall). For more images of Whisnant's furniture, see S 1577, volume 11, slides S82-947 - S82-951. The Folk Arts in Schools Project in Columbia and Hamilton County was a joint venture between the county school systems and the Florida Folklife Program. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, and in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists.
- Collection
Painter Pharaoh Baker at his studio with his works | Painter Pharaoh Baker at his studio with his works | Still Image | Painters Sculptors Fieldwork Art African Americans Painting Decorative arts Material culture Workplace Sculpture Figurines Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Painter Pharaoh Baker at his studio with his works
- Date
- 1978
- Description
- Thirty-seven color slides. Baker, with his wife, at his studio. Also includes several images of his paintings and sculptures. Baker, whose first painting was a copy of a church hand fan for which he was paid five dollars when he was a child, studied art at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee. He worked for years as a professional sign painter in Lake City, but also created emotionally charged and religiously influenced paintings and sculptures on the side. Folklorist Blanton Owen has described his work as 'blues on canvas'. Baker died in 2002. For an interview with Baker, see S 1576, box 11, C84-2.
- Collection
Painters Frog Smith and Pharaoh Baker exhibit at the Stephen Foster Center | Painters Frog Smith and Pharaoh Baker exhibit at the Stephen Foster Center | Still Image | Painters Exhibits Art Painting Sculpture Figurines African Americans Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Painters Pharaoh Baker and Ellis Wright in the studio | Painters Pharaoh Baker and Ellis Wright in the studio | Still Image | Painters Fieldwork Apprentices Teaching of folklore African Americans Painting Art Workplace Workshops Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Painters Pharaoh Baker and Ellis Wright in the studio
- Date
- 1984-04
- Description
- One proof sheet with 36 black and white prints (plus negatives). Baker and Wright were among the first participants in the apprenticeship program, 1983-1984. Master artist Baker taught Wright painting. Images were created in Baker's studio. Baker, whose first painting was a copy of a church hand fan for which he was paid five dollars when he was a child, studied art at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee. He worked for years as a professional sign painter in Lake City, but also created emotionally charged and religiously influenced paintings and sculptures on the side. Folklorist Blanton Owen has described his work as 'blues on canvas'. Baker died in 2002. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skill and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and had agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen,who was later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year until 2003.
- Collection
Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Folk festivals Special events Folklore revival festivals Festivals African Americans Art Demonstrations Painters Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival
- Date
- 1983-05
- Description
- Seven color slides. Baker, whose first painting was a copy of church hand fan for which he was paid five dollars when he was a child, studied art at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee. He worked for years as a professional sign painter in Lake City, but also created emotionally charged and religiously influenced paintings and sculptures on the side. Folklorist Blanton Owen has described his work as 'blues on canvas'. Baker died in 2002.
- Collection
Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Folk festivals Special events Folklore revival festivals Festivals African Americans Art Demonstrations Painters Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Pharaoh Baker at the 1983 Florida Folk Festival
- Date
- 1983-05
- Description
- Seven color slides. Baker, whose first painting was a copy of a church hand fan for which he was paid five dollars when he a child, studied art at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee. He worked for years as a professional sign painter in Lake City, but also created emotionally charged and religiously influenced paintings and sculptures on the side. Folklorist Blanton Owen has described his work as 'blues on canvas'. Baker died in 2002.
- Collection
Pharaoh Baker painting at the 1984 Florida Folk Festival | Pharaoh Baker painting at the 1984 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Artists Painting African Americans Painters | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Pharaoh Baker's paintings and sculptures | Pharaoh Baker's paintings and sculptures | Still Image | Painters Fieldwork Art African Americans Painting Sculpture Metal sculpture Metal craft Figurines Arts, African Artists | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Pharaoh Baker's paintings and sculptures
- Date
- 1981-08-26
- Description
- Twenty-six color slides. Slides S82-976 and 987 are missng. Baker, whose first painting was a copy of church hand fan for which he was paid five dollars when just a child, studied art at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee. He worked for years as a professional sign painter in Lake City, but also created his own emotionally charged and religious influenced paintings and sculptures on the side. Folklorist Blanton Owen has described his work as 'blues on canvas'. Baker died in 2002. The Folk Arts in Schools Project in Columbia and Hamilton County was a joint venture between the county school systems and the Florida Folklife Program. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, and in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists.
- Collection