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Portrait of the Artist as… May 24, 2026

Posted by judylobo in Zoo.
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 I have always been interested in ‘self-taught’ artists’ work. There is something deeply intimate about self-taught artists—those who come to art not through institutions, though through instinct, necessity, and an unrelenting inner drive to make something visible. The work carries a different kind of weight. It is not polished for approval or filtered through theory before it arrives; it is lived, and that presence is felt almost immediately in Self-Made: A Century of Inventing Artists at the American Folk Art Museum. There is a closeness to it all, a human immediacy that feels grounding rather than performative, and at times a certain grit that lends the work its honesty. This exhibition that takes a critical look at the historical definition of the “self-taught artist” in the United States through the lens of self-representation. Self-Made is the first sustained museum exploration of artistic self-fashioning by artists who worked outside conventional art-world systems, including those historically excluded due to race, gender, disability, and other deviations from normative power structures. The exhibition challenges longstanding assumptions, positioning these artists not at the margins, but as central contributors to the story of modern and contemporary art. What does it mean to make yourself an artist when no one has formally granted you that space? That question moves through the exhibition with a quiet persistence. Self-portraits, alter egos, and autobiographical works feel less like stylistic choices and more like acts of authorship and presence. Drawn largely from the Museum’s collection, the presentation includes paintings, drawings, sculptures, videos, photographs, and artist books, many on view for the first time. The American Folk Art Museum is located at 2 Lincoln Square, diagonally across from Lincoln Center. As always, admission to the Museum is free, underscoring its commitment to broad public access. My own ‘self-portrait can be see above the title photo today. I did that painting when I was a Freshman at RISD a very long time ago. I still have it hanging in my apartment. It reminds me of the young artist I was before four years of art school education.

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treedriven3349677e4a's avatar 1. treedriven3349677e4a - May 24, 2026

This is my favorite post yet!

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judylobo's avatar judylobo - May 24, 2026

Awwww – thanks Donald.

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Sue Barrasi's avatar 2. Sue Barrasi - May 24, 2026

Love reading your Sunday post!

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judylobo's avatar judylobo - May 24, 2026

Thanks Sue

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joel dowshen's avatar 3. joel dowshen - May 24, 2026

Wow (Plu)! Marsha’s “selfi” has been hanging on our porch since then too. Some pre Art School mutual influence does come through me thinks? Beautiful post and thoughts.

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judylobo's avatar judylobo - May 24, 2026

Aww – thank Joel. Can you sen me Marsha’s ‘selfi’. I have a vague memory of it.

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bassomatic's avatar 4. bassomatic - May 24, 2026

I loved your Sunday post this morning.

It reminded me of my self-taught, Aunt Blossom’s extraordinary charcoal and watercolor paintings and my father’s not-so-extraordinary attempts at painting.

I recall trying my hand at art by using an instructional book, something about painting upside down or with a non-dominant hand, or maybe while using drugs. It never made much sense (it was the drugs), so I stuck with writing for my chance at being creative.

Thanks for sharing these insights.

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judylobo's avatar judylobo - May 24, 2026

Your response is priceless cousin.

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fotobuff14's avatar 5. fotobuff14 - May 24, 2026

Great photos as always Judy. Interesting topic but all your posts are interesting. I learn a lot thanks to your posts

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judylobo's avatar judylobo - May 25, 2026

Thank you for reading them

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fotobuff14's avatar 6. fotobuff14 - May 24, 2026

Great pics as always Judy. I learn a lot from your posts which are always so interesting.

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