The Florida Highwaymen

Swaying palm trees. Rough seas. Brilliant red Poinciana trees. Cotton candy sunsets that light up the canvas in ways you might not know possible.

That’s what you’ll find among the paintings of the Florida Highwaymen. I had the pleasure of seeing several as part of a special exhibit at the Westmoreland Museum of American Art a few weeks ago.

From the early fifties through the eighties, there were 26 African American painters who were called The Highwaymen. They painted gorgeous rural and beach scenes from the Florida landscape.

They painted in home workshops and garages, creating a prolific catalog of work that they sold door-to-door to businesses and individuals. They could also be seen selling from the trunks of their cars along the highways. Back in the day, these paintings cost about $25 apiece. Today one of these paintings can command $5,000 to $10,000.

Despite the talents of these individuals, racial segregation in Florida prevented them from being sold in professional galleries.

The museum had laminated sheets for each painter with brief biographies and I was fascinated by the origins of these artists. Most were self taught. They knew each other and mentored one another and you can see how they influenced one another.

Their stories are tragic and discouraging, inspiring and thought provoking. Their work is stunning.

This exhibition just closed so I’m sorry to say you can’t go see these paintings in Pennsylvania. That’s a shame too because they did a nice job showing the art while telling the stories of the artists and of the Jim Crow world they lived in. The fact they faced such a grim and racist reality but chose to paint such beauty is incredible.

If you ever get a chance to go see some of these paintings, I hope you will. They are extraordinary.

Want to know more about these painters? Click here to find biographies of the 25 men and one woman who we know as the Highwaymen.

Westmoreland Museum Of American Art

Tucked away in Greensburg, Pennsylvania is an art museum that exists because a woman nearing the end of her life decided her city needed one.

The Westmoreland Museum of American Art opened in 1959 thanks to a gift from Mary Marchand Woods that established the Woods Marchand Foundation ten years before.

We spent a wonderful Saturday afternoon there admiring artwork but also contemplating the thought and ingenuity that went into using space to tell a story.

They have a permanent collection as well as space that rotates. There is a Chihuly installation in a random stairwell and a permanent collection them at celebrated the industrial and working class origins of Pittsburgh.

Some favorites include this piece of gorgeous stained glass from Tiffany Glass around 1905.

Pieces that celebrate the blue color workers who built Pittsburgh are incredibly moving.

Artwork on baseballs was a fun surprise that I liked. I don’t care about baseball at all but thought these pieces of art created by minor league umpire George Sosnak were pretty great.

That’s the thing about museums. if you go with an open mind, you never know what amazing new favorite thing you will find.

Next up I’ll tell you about a special exhibit that, unfortunately, has ended but that I think you might enjoy hearing about!