Ultimately, the examination of African American art is double-edged, for it inherently involves two goals: to celebrate achievement and to fix/define notions about race. “Race” is an idea, a position; it is a process, undergoing constant change and negotiation. “Race” is not a fact; yet it is real. According to the cultural historian Raymond Williams, the difficulties surrounding the concept “race” began “when it was used to denote a group within a species, as in the case of the ‘races of man.’” 5 To quote historian Barbara J. Fields, “Race is a product of history, not of nature.” Furthermore, ideologies of race vary according to context. In the United States, “race” became current when large numbers of men and women began to question the moral legitimacy of slavery. Subsequently, stereotypes of difference arose from the opposition’s need to circumscribe “black” and “white.” As Fields noted, the often-contradictory qualities ascribed to the two “races” led to a hardening of categories, which profoundly influenced the lives of those forced to live within them. 6
In order to begin to confront the reality of those experiences mediated by “race,” we must acknowledge what historian Elsa Barkley Brown termed the “relational nature of difference.” Recognition and inclusion of difference are not enough, she argued; rather, such strategies often function as a way to avoid challenges. Using the example of the large number of African American women employed as domestics and childcare workers in the homes of middle- and upper-class white women, Brown argued that we must comprehend that white women historically were able to live the lives they did precisely because black women lived the lives that they did. 7 Likewise this issue of The Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies could not exist without the understanding that, “out there somewhere,” there is a category (often unstated but absorbed as “the norm”) that can be labeled “white American art.”
How does one introduce a portfolio of twenty-nine works by African American artists in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of Chicago that span from 1803 to 1997 and differ so greatly? What can be inferred when, at the end of the twentieth century, we continue to link works solely because of the race of their makers that were actually produced at different historical moments and created in a variety of mediums and techniques? Since each of the objects mentioned in the Portfolio section is discussed in an individual entry, our aim here is to consider the historic and current implications, as well as the benefits and limitations, of discussing art by African Americans collectively.

















