The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amy Sherald wins Driskell Prize

High recognizes artist behind official portrait of Michelle Obama.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

Last year, the fortunes of artist Amy Sherald, a Columbus native and a fine arts graduate of Clark Atlanta University, took a sharp turn upward.

In October, she was chosen to paint the official portrait of former first lady Michelle Obama, a painting that will hang in the Smithsonia­n National Portrait Gallery. The painting is to be revealed Tuesday in Washington, D.C.

When the Baltimore resident was picked, she had already gained some renown, winning the Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait Competitio­n. With the Obama commission, Sherald’s career gathered steam.

“There is going to be a spotlight on her,” portraitur­e expert and Mount Holyoke College professor Paul Staiti told The New York Times. “She should fasten her seatbelt.”

Staiti’s words were prescient. On Thursday, the High Museum of Art announced that Sherald, 44, would be the 2018 winner of the David C. Driskell Prize, in recognitio­n of her contributi­on to African-American art. The award was founded by the High in 2005 as the “first national award to celebrate an early- or mid-career scholar or artist whose work makes an original and important contributi­on to the field of African-American art or art history.”

It carries a $25,000 prize, and the acknowledg­ment of Sherald’s significan­ce. The artist will be celebrated at an April 27 dinner at the High, which will also serve as a money-raiser to support the David C. Driskell African American Art Acquisitio­n Funds.

Since their inception, the funds have supported the acquisitio­n of 48 works by African-American artists for the High’s collection, though none by Sherald. (Such efforts at diversifyi­ng the museum’s collection­s and outreach have dramatical­ly increased minority attendance at the High.)

“Sherald is a remarkable talent who in recent years has gained

the recognitio­n she so thoroughly deserves as a unique force in contempora­ry art,” said the High’s director, Rand Suffolk, in a statement.

Born in Columbus in 1973, Sherald graduated from Clark Atlanta University in 1997 with a bachelor’s degree in painting.

She received her master’s in painting from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 2004, but a few circumstan­ces delayed her career in the arts. That same year, she was diagnosed with congestive heart failure, and moved back to Columbus to care for two ailing relatives.

Sherald received a lifesaving heart transplant in 2012, and resumed working in her Baltimore studio, with the aid of daily anti-rejection drugs. Her portraits are of everyday African-American figures, often in colorful clothes.

Nomination­s for the 2018 Driskell Prize came from a national pool of artists, curators, teachers, collectors and art historians. Sherald was chosen from among these nomination­s by a review committee composed of former Driskell winners and the High’s curator of modern and contempora­ry art, Michael Rooks.

David Driskell was born in 1931 in Eatonton, and is distinguis­hed professor emeritus at the University of Maryland, College Park. The author of several significan­t works on African-American art history, Driskell was honored in 2000 with the National Humanities Medal by President Bill Clinton.

 ?? MUSEUM CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH ?? Amy Sherald, a portraitis­t and Clark Atlanta University graduate, is the winner of the High Museum of Art’s 2018 Driskell Prize.
MUSEUM CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH Amy Sherald, a portraitis­t and Clark Atlanta University graduate, is the winner of the High Museum of Art’s 2018 Driskell Prize.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH MUSEUM ?? This portrait, titled “A Clear Unspoken Granted Magic,” is by Amy Sherald, winner of the 2018 Driskell Prize.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH MUSEUM This portrait, titled “A Clear Unspoken Granted Magic,” is by Amy Sherald, winner of the 2018 Driskell Prize.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States