Allie McGhee
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Allie McGhee (born in 1941, in Charleston, West Virginia) is a Detroit-based African American painter and pillar of the Detroit art community since the 1960s. Allie McGhee attended Cass Technical High School in Detroit, MI, and completed his undergraduate work at Eastern Michigan University in 1965. McGhee’s paintings are lyrical, material-driven works rendered in swirling constellations of industrial paint and found media. Drawing inspiration from African cosmology, African symbolism, and free jazz, his work explores the inherent tensions between spontaneity and premeditation, intention and accident. McGhee’s art practice features painting and sculpture, consisting of collage, drape, and still compositions that enclose the spellbinding visuals of colors merging in a fusion of stains, dashes, and waves. A signature style of McGhee’s includes his ''Crushed Paintings'', in which the artist turns compositions on vinyl, canvas or paper into amorphous forms. McGhee comes from the same school of Black abstract painters which includes
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. His work is included in collections at the
Detroit Institute of Arts The Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA), located in Midtown Detroit, Michigan, has one of the list of largest art museums, largest and most significant art collections in the United States. With over 100 galleries, it covers with a major renovation a ...
, St. Louis Museum of Art, and the
Studio Museum in Harlem The Studio Museum in Harlem is an American art museum devoted to the work of artists of African descent. The museum's galleries are currently closed in preparation for a building project that will replace the current building, located at 144 W ...
, among other institutions.


Biography

From an early age, Allie McGhee displayed an adamant interest in art-marking. With his mother’s encouragement, McGhee converted his family’s basement into his first artist studio. McGhee was heavily drawn to the Cubist Art period, and spent his childhood mimicking painters such as George Braque. Concurrent with his art-making process, McGhee developed a daily ritual of playing music whenever he practiced in the studio – an early indication of the artist's potent relationship between art and music. In 1969, his friend and mentor Charles McGee curated a show at the Detroit Artist Market entitled "Seven Black Artists," which included Charles McGee himself, Allie, Harold Neal, Lester Johnson, Henri Umbaji King, Robert Murray, James Lee, and Robert J. Stull. The group would later form Gallery 7, a collective and gallery space located on 8232 West McNichols. There Allie McGhee taught art classes to youth. Eventually, Allie McGhee became interested in themes related to science, and space exploration. He followed photographic captures from space study taken by the Hubble Telescope, creating paintings that are inspired by astrological forms.


Influences

Prior to the 1960s, artworks by Allie McGhee were primarily figurative before he transitioned to abstract painting. The
1967 Detroit Riots The 1967 Detroit Riot, also known as the 12th Street Riot or Detroit Rebellion, was the bloodiest of the urban riots in the United States during the "Long, hot summer of 1967". Composed mainly of confrontations between Black residents and the De ...
and the influx of experimental jazz music inspired the artist to engage with history, improvisation, and science through abstraction. McGhee grew weary of the limits of figurative painting while the
Black Arts Movement The Black Arts Movement (BAM) was an African American-led art movement that was active during the 1960s and 1970s. Through activism and art, BAM created new cultural institutions and conveyed a message of black pride. The movement expanded from ...
called upon Black artists to contribute to the revolution by embodying a progressive, avant-garde, afrocentric visual, linguistic, and sonic aesthetic to help shape postmodern Black culture. Artworks such
''Black Attack'', (1967)
encapsulates a period of radical uproar, while artworks lik
''Night Ritual'', (1991)
depicts a universal approach to pure abstraction. McGhee's study of the universal plane began as an inclination to document the micro and macro expressions of nature, through recurring symbols such as the line and curve. N’namdi, Kembra (2005) Allie McGhee, Rhythms: Micro to Macro. G.R. N’namdi Gallery. Which results in a picture plane of marks resembling prehistoric cave paintings and imagery that recalls the celestial sky.


Exhibition history

Under-recognized throughout much of his career, McGhee’s work was the subject of a major retrospective
Banana Moon Horn
which opened October 2021 at Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, MI. Most recently, his work has been the subject of solo presentations
Allie McGhee: Parallax
Harper's, New York (2022)
Allie McGhee: The Ritual of The Mask, Belle Isle Viewing Room
Detroit (2021); Allie McGhee, Hill Gallery, Birmingham, MI (2019); and Cosmic Images 2000, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (2018). In the last decade alone, McGhee’s work was chronicled by major group exhibitions including Harold Neal and Detroit African American Artists, 1945 Through the Black Arts Movement, Wayne State University, Detroit, and Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI (2021); Enunciated Life, California African American Museum, Los Angeles (2021); Landlord Colors, Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills (2019); Art of the Rebellion: Black Art of the Civil Rights Movement, Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit (2017); and Ménage a Detroit: Three Generations of Detroit Expressionist Art, 1970-2012, N’Namdi Center for Contemporary Art, Detroit (2012). His work is included in numerous public collections including Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Mott-Warsh Collection, Flint, MI; St. Louis Museum of Art, St. Louis; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; and Toyota City Hall, Toyota, JP. McGhee is represented b
Harper’s


Public collections

* Barfield Companies, Livonia, MI * Detroit Council of the Arts, Detroit, MI * Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI * Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI * Fondazione Imago Mundi, Treviso, IT * Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI * Hooven-Dayton Corporation, Dayton, OH * Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL * Koichiro Iwasaki, Kagoshima, JP * Martin Luther King Center, Detroit, MI * Kohler Corporation, Kohler, WI * Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD * Mott-Warsh Collections, Flint, MI * St Louis Museum of Art, St. Louis, MO * The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY * The T.L.C Beatrice Food International, New York, NY * Toyota City Hall, Toyota, JP * Washington State University, Seattle, WA * Your Heritage House, Detroit, MI


References


Further reading

* Lombardi, D. Dominick. "Allie McGhee: Parallax," ''The Brooklyn Rail'', October 5, 2022 * Mott, Laura and Renee Aldridge, Taylor (2021) Allie McGhee: ''Banana Moon Horn''. Bloomfields, MI: Cranbrook Art Museum. ISBN 978-1-7333824-2-7 * Mott, Laura, et al,. (2019), ''Landlord Colors: On Art, Economy, and Materiality''. Bloomfields, MI: Cranbrook Art Museum. ISBN 978-0-9891864-9-0 * Alan Nawrocki, Dennis, et al., (2018) ''Essay'D 3: 30 Detroit Artists''. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-4587-0 * Goody, Dick (2008) ''Seminal Works from the N’namdi Collection of African American Art''. Rochester, MI: Oakland University Press. ISBN 978-0925859464 * N’namdi, Kembra (2005) ''Allie McGhee, Rhythms: Micro to Macro''. G.R. N’namdi Gallery. * Harris, Bill (1977) ''From These Roots: Photographs and Artifacts from Africa: Paintings by Alma W. Thomas, Charles McGee, Allie McGhee''. Detroit, MI: Your Heritage House * Hobbes, J. Kline (1977) ''American Black Art: The Known and the New''. Battle Creek and Midland, MI: Battle Creek Civic Art Center and Midland Center for the Arts *
Artists reflect on pain and consequences of Detroit riots
" Interview,
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, July 28, 2017 {{DEFAULTSORT:McGhee, Allie 1941 births Living people Artists from Detroit African-American artists African-American painters African-American contemporary artists American male painters 20th-century American painters 21st-century American painters