Aubrey Williams

Dublin Core

Title

Aubrey Williams

Subject

arrival

Description

Aubrey Williams (8 May 1926 – 17 April 1990) was a Guyanese artist. He was best known for his large, oil-on-canvas paintings, which combine elements of abstract expressionism with forms, images and symbols inspired by the pre-Columbian art of indigenous peoples of the Americas. Born in Georgetown in British Guiana (now Guyana), Williams began drawing and painting at an early age. He received informal art tutoring from the age of three, and joined the Working Peoples' Art Class at the age of 12. After training as an agronomist he worked as an Agricultural Field Officer for eight years, initially on the sugar plantations of the East Coast and later in the North-West region of the country — an area inhabited primarily by the indigenous Warao people. His time among the Warao had a dramatic impact on his artistic approach, and initiated the complex obsession with pre-Columbian arts and cultures that ran throughout his artistic career. Williams left Guyana at the height of the Independence Movement in 1952, and moved to the United Kingdom. Following his first exhibition in London in 1954, he became an increasingly significant figure in the post-war British avant-garde art scene, particularly through his association with Denis Bowen's New Vision Centre Gallery. In 1966, he came together with a group of London-based Caribbean artists and intellectuals to found the Caribbean Artists Movement, which served as a dynamic hub of cultural events and activity until its dissolution in 1972.

Source

stories,arrival

Date

1952

Type

Story

Identifier

6245

Spatial Coverage

current,55.57834467218206,-4.130859375000001;origin,6.802353193752636,-58.15132141113281;

Europeana

Europeana Type

TEXT

Story Item Type Metadata

End Date

1952

Files

Aubrey Williams.png

Citation

“Aubrey Williams,” EU-LAC, accessed November 23, 2024, https://eu-lac.org/omeka/items/show/6739.

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