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Prolific Artist, Radcliffe Bailey Dies at 54

 

Radcliffe Bailey, the artist known for his  contributions to Black art has died. 

Bailey’s art depicted the Black experience through paintings, sculpture and mixed-media pieces. 

The artist often incorporated repurposed objects in his creations such the wooden piano keys used “Windward Coast–West Coast Slave Trade.” The display features a sequined head  sitting atop a “sea” of wooden piano keys and was featured in the Art In Common gallery in Chicago.   The gallery label describes the meaning of the piano keys. 

This piece expresses his love of music, as well as the history, culture and spirituality contained in the song. Here, the undulating keys are arranged to resemble the turbulent waters of Middle Passage.”  

In an interview with the Brooklyn Rail, the artist explained his process in selecting the materials for the 2021 piece, “Slow Blues.” 

“I used indigo, and there’s that heavy, loaded meaning behind indigo, used as a crop during slavery, and also references the blues. It’s a mixture of all that. And the piece is in a cabinet, it’s not a frame; I refer to these works as medicine cabinets. The idea was that whenever you get sick, you go to the medicine cabinet to get something to make you feel better. I refer to memory as medicine.”

Bailey was born on Nov. 25, 1968 in Bridgeton, New Jersey and was raised in Atlanta.  He received his BFA from Atlanta College of Art in 1991.  

While in college, he established himself in the art world with his early works which were inspired by the Hip-Hop culture of the 1970’s and 1980’s.  

Fans and friends took to social media to pay tribute to the renowned artist, including former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, Bailey’s childhood friend.  

Bailey is survived by his wife Leslie Parks Bailey, daughter Olivia, son Coles, his father and mother Radcliffe Sr. and Brenda along with a host of family and friends.

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