Smith Callaway Banks Southern Folk Art Collection

Smith Callaway Banks Southern Folk Art Collection

The pleasure I derive from collecting folk art is now matched by my pleasure in sharing it with others by donating my collection to Georgia Southern for permanent display.

— Smith Callaway Banks, November 30, 2007

Folk Art

logo_scbsfacThe question of what ‘Folk Art’ is a question raised by academia and not one raised by the artists themselves. The Oxford Dictionary defines folk art as: “Noun  Artistic works, as paintings, sculpture, basketry, and utensils, produced typically in cultural isolation by untrained often anonymous artisans.”  The dictionary even goes on to define what defines Folk Art saying, “[…] marked by such attributes as highly decorative design, bright bold colors and flattened perspectives with strong forms in simple arrangements.”  What is Folk Art, is a question raised by academics who seek to categorize, compartmentalize and define every aspect of human life.  For the academics, defining and seeking out Folk Art is another outlet of study and publication.  For many, folk art is an untapped resource of vernacular, the truly rural vernacular of the people.

Therefore, some see Folk Art to grasp at nostalgic straws of a disappearing rural landscape in America.  Rural America is a fading idea and Folk Art captures pieces of that ruralness.  It ably captures the humble beginnings of America and the “Go West young man” spirit of Manifest Destiny.  However, Folk Art cannot be compartmentalized even within that definition.  Folk art is being broken down everyday into categories that define and change it.  Art Brut, Raw Art, Outsider Art, Visionary Art, Memory Art are any number of sub-categories that ‘Folk Art’ is being broken into everyday.  True, it is very necessary to ‘save’ Folk Art.  It is dying piece of Americana and indeed folk art around the world seems to be suffering from the same fate, from urbanization, changing attitudes and what not.

Robert Lowry, from the Lowry Gallery in Athens, Georgia had this to say about Folk Art: “Folk Artists aren’t in it for the money.  They are driven by the pure need to create and that may be a higher power or a primal need, but they just have to create.” Lowry puts it best, Folk Art with a capital F and A is a primal drive.  There is no education, no training, it is an unstoppable urge.  However, it is possible to argue that Folk Art is less the primal uninhibited drive to create.  Practical Folk Art, is still folk art, is it not?  I would argue, that no, it is not.  Practicality is born from necessity.  For some, potters, the art serves the penultimate practical purpose.  Protection of food and livelihood, but just because pots are necessary does not inherently mean that they have to be boring or bland.  Perhaps, the potters feel the primal urge to create and in response to that urge that create practical and beautiful items.  This line of argument excuses them from the necessity of the pot and allows them creative freedom.

Nevertheless, Folk Art is art that originates from the people.  Not from the elite or the well trained artist.  Folk Art is fundamentally the art of the vox populi a creative outlet of those who do not have the training.  The job then, of the academic, is not to categorize it, but to protect the vox populis’ art.  The case is simple then, Folk Art is a disappearing medium for the people as urbanization spreads and old customs die throughout America.  What, Folk Art is now is a reactionary statement of some Americans to the loss of the “good ol’ days” and some seek to preserve it.  Folk Art, particularly in America does not follow the definition of the Oxford Dictionary at all. It is ever changing and adapting to the desires of the people.  Once, it was anonymous, rural, and practical.  Next it was primal, full of spirit and new life.  Now Folk Art it is reactionary, the voice of the vernacular and it craves nostalgia, the spirit of the once and then.

Written by Cassandra Lockard

While the BFSDoArt displays selections from the Betty Foy Sanders Georgia Artist Collection, there are occasionally objects that are not on view. If you are interested in viewing any artworks that are not on view, please contact the Gallery Director to schedule an appointment to look at the object(s). Please note that all requests require seven-day notice and staff can not accommodate ‘same day’ requests.

Last updated: 3/14/2022

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