Label TextIn this hunting scene, figures and animals are rendered nearly as silhouettes and float on a monochrome background. Inspired by the people he saw on a busy street, animals and livestock, and objects around him such as those found in a nearby blacksmith shop, Bill Traylor developed a signature style that recalls drawings from ancient civilizations. The artist evokes space by stacking the two-dimensional figures in the picture plane, creating a complex grouping that is lyrical, lively, and mysterious. A self-taught artist, Traylor began drawing at age eighty-five. Born into slavery in 1853, he lived and worked most of his life on an Alabama plantation until he moved to the capital city of Montgomery in 1938. There, he sat on the sidewalk daily and made paintings with available materials including crayons, pencils, and poster paint on surfaces such as cardboard and odd pieces of paper.
(Lana Meador, 2019)