Revisiting 5+1 at Stony Brook University

A longer version of this essay appeared in 鈥淩evisiting 5+1,鈥 a catalogue accompanying the , which was on view at Stony Brook University鈥檚 Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery from November 10, 2022 through March 31, 2023.

Purchase a copy of the catalogue , through Stony Brook鈥檚 Staller Center for the Arts, or at 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 Boston鈥檚 Linde Family Wing Bookstore and Shop.


From October 16 to November 8, 1969, at the State University of New York at Stony Brook (now Stony Brook University), works by artists Frank Bowling, Melvin Edwards, Daniel LaRue Johnson, Alvin (Al) Loving, Jack Whitten, and William T. Williams were on display in an exhibition sponsored by the newly launched Black Studies program.1The exhibition, entitled 鈥5+1,鈥 was held in two small classrooms converted into a gallery within the Humanities building, situated amid the departments of Art, English, Language, Philosophy, and the first courses in Black Studies. Large works filled the classroom walls from floor to ceiling, and in the center of the gallery, a work by Melvin Edwards, Curtain (for William and Peter) (1969), bisected the space with barbed wire and chain suspended from the track of a removable wall. For the opening, Bowling coordinated a bus to bring city dwellers out to the campus and a 鈥減ukka bartender鈥 to greet them on their arrival.2 Sixty miles east of Manhattan, Stony Brook was a fledgling institution, just a decade into its history. British art critic Lawrence Alloway had recently been hired in the Department of Art (at the urging of then Professor Allan Kaprow) to teach courses in 20th-century art and criticism and develop an on-campus gallery program.3 Keeping one foot firmly planted in the New York art world, Alloway hoped to bridge the distance from the rural college town by making unconventional use of spaces on campus to bring artists to stage experimental exhibitions such as 鈥5+1.鈥

The art in 鈥5+1鈥 occupied an uneasy space between what were perceived as two incommensurable extremes: the overtly political, representational Black Arts Movement and the purportedly apolitical, elitist work of abstraction. Drawn together by their shared desire to move beyond the false dichotomy, the artists met in Bowling鈥檚 studio over the summer of 1969 to discuss the direction of 鈥5+1.鈥4 Creating abstract works that engaged with Black aesthetics and identity, they insisted that the political and the artistic were not in fact mutually exclusive.

The exhibition received scant press in 1969, yet its historical significance is far reaching. In addition to marking a pivotal moment in the development of the artists, the exhibition and small accompanying publication were significant early salvos in a rich, complex period in the discourse of art and race. Speaking to the productive, at times contentious debates that arose from their differing perspectives, Bowling referred to the grouping as 鈥渁ntagonistic pairs.鈥

Four people stand in a line against a white wall with large tapestries against it.  Black-and-white image.
Left to right: Mary Whitten, Frank Bowling, Jack Whitten, and Al Loving at the opening reception for 鈥5+1,鈥 1969. Photograph by Adger Cowans. 漏 Adger Cowans. Courtesy Frank Bowling Archive.

Bowling himself continued to critically engage with the exhibition in subsequent writing for Arts Magazine, reflecting on the art included as well as on the exhibition鈥檚 genesis and realization. In 1991, Bowling considered the 鈥渄ominant male preserve鈥 of Black artists exhibited in the 1960s and 1970s and, in reference to his own naivety in 1969, described 鈥5+1鈥 as a 鈥渃onvenient grouping of your all-male club.鈥 Nevertheless, Bowling recognized, there were Black women artists in the 1960s and 1970s whose works existed similarly outside the confining discourses of art. Howardena Pindell鈥檚 substantial career, for example, paralleled Bowling鈥檚, with her expansive studio practice complemented by writing, curating, and educating. In 1969, Pindell was a curatorial assistant at the Museum of Modern Art, and ten years later, in 1979, she joined Alloway in the Department of Art at Stony Brook.

Without questioning the specificity of the original six artists in 鈥5+1, our revisiting of the exhibition respectfully engages Bowling鈥檚 self-reflective critique. Identifying Black women artists who belonged to some of the same artistic networks as the men in the exhibition and who similarly made both social and abstract art, we worked with Howardena Pindell, Distinguished Professor of Art at Stony Brook, to curate a parallel group of artworks. Pindell chose five artists, Vivian Browne, Mary Lovelace O鈥橬eal, Alma Thomas, Mildred Thompson, and Betye Saar鈥攚ho were active in the 1960s, creating art that existed in dialogue with her own artistic practice and philosophical attitudes toward the conditions of Black art. The affinities identified by Pindell are further affirmed by the overlapping activities of the men and women in 鈥淩evisiting 5+1,鈥 evidenced by shared exhibition histories and discussed in statements made by the various artists over the years.

In addition to its role in these histories, 鈥5+1鈥 took place amid the burgeoning Black Student Movement, which led to the creation of Black Studies departments, at Stony Brook and nationally. The research for this project has made us aware of the unique capacity of university art galleries, as flexible spaces that encourage experimentation and critical thought, to host vanguard exhibitions that center marginalized artists. Yet this same spirit of experimentation, together with students and faculty turnover, can also leave a spotty historical record of these exhibitions, which were often fleeting events in a single classroom gallery amid a constellation of happenings on campus.

When we began our research, we learned quickly that no material is held by Stony Brook University pertaining to the exhibition, apart from a scan of the 1969 catalogue and a singular mention of the exhibition in the student newspaper, the Statesman, from October 31, 1969. Even among the papers of Alloway and Bowling, no checklist of works exhibited exists. And so, a suite of stunning photographs capturing the exhibition鈥檚 opening by Adger Cowans, as well as additional documentary images provided by the Bowling Studio, paired with Janet Bloom鈥檚 exhibition review in Arts Magazine, became our primary resources for identifying the works in the exhibition. Working with the living artists from 鈥5+1,鈥 as well as artist/estate representatives and researchers from other institutions, we were able to make critical realizations about 鈥5+1,鈥 which we examine in our exhibition catalogue.

Graphic black text reading "5+1" printed diagonally across craft paper.
鈥5+1鈥 exhibition catalogue, 1969.

More than fifty years after 鈥5+1鈥 occurred at Stony Brook University, the occasion of the exhibition 鈥淔rank Bowling鈥檚 Americas鈥 at the 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 Boston provided the opportunity to re-engage the exhibition and rebuild its history. In our exhibition and catalogue, we sought to provide a history to the exhibition that acknowledged the multiple contextual frames of 鈥5+1鈥: connecting the practices of the original six artists with broader cultural and art historical events of 1969, and illuminating the artists鈥 connections to the Black Student Movement.

Notes

1 The 1969 鈥5+1鈥 exhibition catalogue notes sponsorship by the Afro-American Studies Department, though no such department existed at Stony Brook in 1969. However, the Black Studies Program was established at Stony Brook in fall of 1969, the same semester that 鈥5+1鈥 was presented on campus. At Princeton University, where the exhibition was initially planned to travel, in partnership with Sam Hunter, a professor in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton, but ultimately did not, a Department of African American Studies was also established in 1969. For an account of the artists鈥 decision to not show their work at Princeton, see Melvin Edwards in (interview), BOMB, Nov 24, 2014, 45.

2 Frank Bowling, handwritten list for Stony Brook University project, undated (1969). Handwritten note. Courtesy Frank Bowling Archive.

3 Tara Treacy, 鈥淎lloway Seeks Art for Everyone,鈥 The Statesman 20, no. 17 (October 27, 1976): 3A.

4 Melvin Edwards in 鈥淢elvin Edwards鈥 (interview), in Frank Bowling鈥檚 Americas: New York, 1966鈥75, eds. Reto Th眉ring and Akili Tommasino with Debra Lennard, exh. cat. (Boston: 澳门六合彩开奖现场直播 Publications, 2022), 22.

Authors

Elise Armani is a curator, PhD candidate in art history and criticism at Stony Brook University, and a 2023鈥24 history of art and visual culture fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She has contributed to projects at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Walker Art Center, the Weisman Art Museum, and TANK Shanghai. She is cocurator of 鈥淩evisiting 5+1鈥 at the Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery, and coeditor of the accompanying catalogue.

Amy Kahng is a curator and PhD candidate in art history and criticism at Stony Brook University and a 2022鈥23 Patricia and Phillip Frost Predoctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. She has contributed to projects at MoMA, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Kukje Gallery, and the Weisman Museum of Art. She is a cocurator of 鈥淩evisiting 5+1鈥 at the Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery, and coeditor of the accompanying catalogue.

Gabriella Shypula is a curator and PhD Candidate in art history and criticism at Stony Brook University. She has worked on curatorial projects at SFMOMA, the Baltimore Museum of Art, MoMA, SculptureCenter, A.I.R. Gallery, and Princeton University Art Museum. She is a cocurator of 鈥淩evisiting 5+1鈥 at the Zuccaire Gallery, and coeditor of the accompanying catalogue.