About this artwork
Among the most influential figures in Chicago’s Black Arts Movement, Billy (Fundi) Abernathy is known for creating images that defined Black confidence, elegance, and style. This work extended to his collaborations with his wife, Sylvia (Laini) Abernathy, with whom he designed album covers for Delmark Records in the 1960s. Around that time, the poet and author Amiri Baraka (born LeRoi Jones) encountered Fundi’s photographs of Chicago and proposed a book project that would combine his poetry with Fundi’s images. The resulting collaboration, In Our Terribleness (Some Elements and Meaning in Black Style), designed by Laini and published in 1970, is both a statement about Black aesthetics and a call to action by the Black Power movement. As Baraka proclaimed, “Our terribleness is our survival as beautiful beings, anywhere.” The Screen and Mother’s Day both appeared in In Our Terribleness. In 1971 the New York Times hailed the book as “an example of the new direction that black art is taking.”
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Status
- Currently Off View
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Department
- Photography and Media
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Artist
- Billy Abernathy
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Title
- The Robe, from the series "Born Hip"
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Place
- United States (Artist's nationality:)
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Date
- 1962
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Medium
- Gelatin silver print
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Dimensions
- 21 × 12.7 cm (8 5/16 × 5 in.)
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Credit Line
- Gift of the Illinois Arts Council
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Reference Number
- 2017.442