Oak Bluffs

Description

Hilda Wilkinson Brown, an artist and art educator, grew up and spent her entire life in Washington, D.C. She spent her summers at her family’s retreat near the Oak Bluffs area of Martha’s Vineyard. At the time, the beach depicted here was reserved for African Americans and known in code as “the inkwell.” As Brown’s niece, the artist Lillian Thomas Burwell, noted, this is an especially poignant image, “in a family sense, of Negro exclusion and reconciliation of the times.”

Oak Bluffs

Hilda Wilkinson Brown

c. 1940

Accession Number

147069

Medium

Graphite, with erasing on cream wove paper

Dimensions

40.7 × 28 cm (16 1/16 × 11 1/16 in.)

Classification

graphite

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hartman