Joe Minter: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:African Village in America.JPG|right|275px|thumb|African Village in America, March 2011]]
[[Image:African Village in America.JPG|right|275px|thumb|African Village in America, March 2011]]
'''Joe Wade Minter Sr''' (born c. [[1942]]) is a retired construction worker and "outsider" artist who created his "'''African Village in America'''" at his home and an adjoining vacant lot at 912 [[Nassau Street]] near [[Shadow Lawn Memorial Park]] in the [[Woodland Park]] neighborhood of [[Birmingham]]'s [[Titusville]] community.
'''Joe Wade Minter Sr''' (born [[March 28]], [[1943]]) is a retired construction worker and "outsider" artist who created his "'''African Village in America'''" at his home and an adjoining vacant lot at 912 [[Nassau Street]] near [[Shadow Lawn Memorial Park]] in the [[Woodland Park]] neighborhood of [[Birmingham]]'s [[Titusville]] community.


Minter served in the U. S. Army from [[1965]] to [[1967]] before turning to metalworking, construction and roadwork. He retired in [[1995]]. Beginning in [[1979]] he began writing down his personal meditations on spiritual matters and the African American experience.  
Minter served in the U. S. Army from [[1965]] to [[1967]] before turning to metalworking, construction and roadwork. He retired in [[1995]]. Beginning in [[1979]] he began writing down his personal meditations on spiritual matters and the African American experience.  
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Minter, Joe}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Minter, Joe}}
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[Category:1943 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:US Army personnel]]
[[Category:US Army personnel]]
[[Category:Artists]]
[[Category:Artists]]
[[Category:Woodland Park]]
[[Category:Woodland Park]]

Revision as of 13:00, 15 February 2023

African Village in America, March 2011

Joe Wade Minter Sr (born March 28, 1943) is a retired construction worker and "outsider" artist who created his "African Village in America" at his home and an adjoining vacant lot at 912 Nassau Street near Shadow Lawn Memorial Park in the Woodland Park neighborhood of Birmingham's Titusville community.

Minter served in the U. S. Army from 1965 to 1967 before turning to metalworking, construction and roadwork. He retired in 1995. Beginning in 1979 he began writing down his personal meditations on spiritual matters and the African American experience.

The African Village in America was begun in 1988 after Minter received a vision from God. The result, which is being continually enlarged, is a densely-packed art environment consisting of sculptures, monuments, signs, plantings and totems. The primary themes involve African-American history, particularly in Birmingham. Specific installations memorialize the 1963 church bombing and Martin Luther King, Jr's stay in the Birmingham City Jail. He includes references to the spirits of African warriors looking over their descendents, and the achievements of African-Americans in numerous fields. Alongside the themes of achievement and loss are constant Biblical references and words of praise and thanks to God. These messages are distinct from William Rice's "cross garden" in Prattville in that they favor praise and respect for God and creation rather than fiery appeals for salvation.

In 2021 a team from the University of Alabama's Paul R. Jones Museum began digitally documenting Minter and his installation with funding from the Atlanta, Georgia-based Souls Grown Deep Foundation, which supports outsider artists.

Publications

  • Minter, Joe Sr (2005) To You Through Me: The Beginning of a Link of a Journey of 400 Years.

References

  • Arnett, William and Paul. (2001) Souls Grown Deep: African American Vernacular Art of the South. Volume 2. Atlanta: Tinwood Books.
  • Rivers, Cheryl. (2004) "Joe Minter" in Coming Home: Self-Taught Artists, the Bible, and the American South. Exhibition catalog. Memphis: University of Memphis
  • Russell, Charles (Winter 2009) "The Stations of the African American Passion" Raw Vision No. 68
  • Garrison, Greg (April 24, 2010) "Birmingham folk artist Joe Minter turns junk into spiritual statement." The Birmingham News
  • Michaels, Ryan (October 14, 2021) "How Alabama Academics Plan to Preserve Artwork of Joe Minter." The Birmingham Times

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