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The Unique Genius of Gullah Artist Allen Fireall
bibliomaniac
Until the publication of Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance, much of the great Jazz Age movement remained a mystery.
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Artist Allen Fireall at Red Piano Too Art Gallery. (photo by Victoria Smalls)

 

When considering that an artist for the past twenty years has been producing and selling more than 100 original paintings per year, it becomes difficult to think of the individual as one of the South's best kept brilliant secrets. Yet, despite the fact that he was selected one of the "top five collectible artists in the region" by Coastal Arts and Antiques Magazine and that his work was featured in a major Hollywood film, a brilliant secret is exactly what the extraordinarily prolific painter Allen Fireall is.
 

Even more challenging to believe is the idea that Fireall, represented in such well-established facilities as Friedman's Fine Art in Savannah, Georgia, and Red Piano Too, on South Carolina's St. Helena Island, should find his gift and livelihood threatened by the onset of diabetes. His rise as an artist has been lifelong one. The battle with diabetes began when he was diagnosis in 2007 after visiting a doctor to find out why his vision seemed at times to go dim or blur. Like many who experience diabetic symptoms before realizing they are indeed symptoms, the artist learned he actually had been suffering unknowingly from the disease for several years.
 

Rather than sending him spiraling into a state of depression, the news spurred him on to produce prize-winning works adapted as posters for the 2008 and 2009 Hilton Head Island Gullah Celebration. In addition, Fireall himself was elected the event's 2008 Featured Artist of the Year.

Not one to "go gently into that good night," Fireall underwent one laser surgery for his eyes in 2007 and two more in 2009. As with any major surgery, the possibility of a negative outcome was as great as that of a positive one and he simply had to wait each time to see what the impact would be. Time brought degrees of healing and he chose not to allow his battle to retain his vision to prevent him from fulfilling his role as "an artist historian," which in his case means an artist who uses his talent to document the history and culture of African Americans in the U.S. Southeast.

Because he was raised in part by grandparents Pearl and Nathan Bentley, in an area just outside Hardeeville, South Carolina, Fireall became very familiar with the community of African Americans known as Gullah, descendants of former slaves who during and after the Civil War occupied a series of islands just off the southern U.S. coast. That familiarity endows his work with a very rich perspective. It reflects the kind of authentic "black folk art" sensibility rarely seen in modern art because he is among those artists who actually lived through many of the experiences seen on his canvasses in contrast to someone who may have simply read about them.

"For a long time I struggled with being identified as a Gullah artist," the painter admits somewhat ironically. "My grandparents raised me and they spoke the Gullah language. We used to laugh at the way they spoke but when I became grown I understood the importance of preserving the language and the culture."
 

In his more Gullah-influenced works are scenes such as the famous "Gullah Bride," which features a beautifully yet slightly tattered dressed woman sitting alone in a boat with the island of Daufuskie resting serenely in the background. The image was beguiling enough to capture the attention of the producers of Nights in Rodanthe, who used it and several other works by Fireall to lend atmosphere to the film. Other more distinctly Gullah-influenced works include his popular series of net throwers, in many ways reminiscent of the historic pictures in photo-essay books by the late Jack Leigh.

More urban-defined canvases depict: scenes of women crowned with uniquely-poised hats or draped in southern-style designer-chic clothes; men in blues clubs or hunched over a checker board; children accompanying parents on their way to church Sunday mornings; and, particularly important to his role as an artist historian, images of storefronts, street corners, and neighborhoods throughout Savannah.

 

Please click this link to read Part 2: The Birth of an Artist

By Aberjhani

Comments
9 Comment count
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Diabetes and Art

Writers and artists often take their creative gifts for granted until some debilitating development comes along to pose a real threat to both their gift and their livelihood. That's part of the larger very important lesson I'm learning from the prolific and gifted Mr. Fireall.

Aberjhani
author of The American Poet Who Went Home Again
and Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File)

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Taking creativity for

Taking creativity for granted is something we pay no attention to; we think, however small our efforts, that nothing will come in the way. or we romanticise it. Ah, we say, the brilliance shone because he went through all that. Sometimes true, not always. Not everyone is strong enough.

Thanks, Aberjhani, for sharing the works of Fireall and his strength.

~F

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Fireall's Story

 
Allen Fireall's story has been teaching me quite a lot about the different aspects of what it means to be a creative artist in these modern times. I'm glad others are picking something up from it as well.
 

Aberjhani
author of The American Poet Who Went Home Again
and Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File)

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thank you for sharing this

thank you for sharing this wonderful artist with us --- his work comes alive, allows us to see yet another thread in the great tapestry of world cultures --- wen

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Very much so

I agree Wen, that is exactly what Allen Fireall's art does.

Aberjhani
author of The American Poet Who Went Home Again
and Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File)

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Love this interview

Hi Aberjhani,
Looking forward to learning about Gullah art in part 2 of this interview.

Thanks for the hard work that goes into crafting a blog article like this.

Best,
Ruth

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Fireall could start a fashion line!

Aberjhani,
"Lady in Waiting" is absolutely regal. I can feel the subtropical South Carolina sun on those clothes and know why the lady needs shade in the first image. Fireall should have work in one of the Smithsonian museums.

Are there any online exhibits of Gullah art that you know of?

Thank you for sharing this wonderful artist here on Redroom.

Best to you,
Ruth :)

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Believe it or not Ruth I've

Believe it or not Ruth I've been asked to sign copies of ELEMENTAL at an art gallery called Red Piano Too and they have a fairly extensive gallery of work by their artists online. You can click the link on the event notice I just posted or try this one: http://www.redpianotoo.com/allen_fireall.html

This will show you more work by Fireall but you will also see the icon leading to other artists at the top of the page. 

Aberjhani

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Thank you1

Hi Aberjhani,

I will look at the guide as soon as I can.

Thanks for expanding my art horizons.

Ruth :)