Moses Ernest Tolliver (July 4, 1918/1920 – October 30, 2006)[1][2] was an American artist. He was known as "Mose T", after the signature on his paintings, signed with a backwards "s."[3]

Mose Tolliver
Mose Tolliver at his home in Alabama, 2002
BornJuly 4, 1918/1920
Died(2006-10-30)October 30, 2006 (aged 86–88)
Montgomery, Alabama
NationalityAmerican
EducationSelf-taught

Biography

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Tolliver was born one of 12 children to sharecroppers Ike and Laney Tolliver[4] in the Pike Road community, near Montgomery, Alabama. His exact year of birth is unknown, though it is known he was born on the Fourth of July as well as between the years 1920–25.[4] He attended school only until the third grade due to a self-described lack of interest in education. In the 1930s, the family moved to Montgomery, Alabama where he helped support his parents and their large family by doing odd jobs.

In the early 1940s he married his childhood friend, Willie Mae Thomas, and had 13 children, 11 of whom survived to adulthood.[4] During the late 1960s, while working at McLendon's furniture factory, he had a severe injury where his legs were crushed when a half-ton load of marble shifted and fell from a forklift as he was sweeping in the furniture factory. After this incident, he turned to painting to combat boredom, pain and long hours of idle time. Although many say that his career started after the accident, Tolliver claims he painted beforehand. He would often turn his paintings upside-down and paint the picture of perhaps an animal and landscape positioned from various directions. Tolliver's titles are wildly divergent; e.g., "Smoke Charlies," "Scopper Bugs," or "Jick Jack Suzy Satisfying her own Self".

On October 30, 2006, Tolliver died from pneumonia in Montgomery, Alabama.[1]

Career

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After the incident at McLendon's, Tolliver saw paintings by McLendon's brother, Raymond, and he decided that he could do that too. The Mclendons offered to buy him lessons and teach him but he declined, wanting to create his own style. This is where Tolliver began to sign his work, "Mose T"[1] with a backward "s."[4] Tolliver's paintings would usually portray some sort of nature, animal, or even self-portraits of himself. He regularly worked with "pure house paint" on plywood,[4] and things like door frames, or table tops, creating whimsical and sometimes erotic pictures of animals, humans, and flora. His familiar themes also included watermelons and birds. Tolliver's painting style is referred to as flat, full frontal, or straight profile with a muted palette.[5] He crafted hanging devices for his work, and many of his later paintings feature a metal soda can ring for display purposes.[6] A "Quail Bird" may glide over a cotton field, or a spread-leg "Diana" or "Moose Lady" may be straddled over an exercise bicycle rack. Never able to walk well following his injury, he painted many self portraits with crutches or would sit on his bed and balance whatever surface he was painting on, on his knees.[7] Tolliver's themes were drawn from his own experience.[1]

 
Raw Vision journal, detail.

Tolliver's work has been exhibited in the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC, and at the Philadelphia College of Art, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Pérez Art Museum Miami, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Relatives of Tolliver have imitated his style and signed their work as he did, making it sometimes difficult for collectors to find an original painting.[1] His daughter Annie was also an artist.[8]

Collections and exhibition

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Mose Tolliver is part of numerous permanent art collections including[9]

Many institutions have exhibited Mose Tolliver works including:

  • National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.[11]
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
  • Deyoung Museum, San Francisco, CA
  • Smithsonian American Art Museum, DC
  • Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL[12]
  • Retrospective, American Folk Art Museum, New York, NY
  • Passionate Visions of the American South, New Orleans, LA

See also

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Mose Tolliver, Folk Painter of Outsider Art, Is Dead" The New York Times (November 3, 2006). Retrieved June 13, 2011
  2. ^ United States Social Security Death Index: Mose E Tolliver
  3. ^ "Mose Tolliver | Encyclopedia of Alabama". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  4. ^ a b c d e Mose Tolliver Archived 2014-07-26 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved June 13, 2011
  5. ^ Frank, Priscilla (2015-04-07). "How An Alabama Handyman Became One Of America's Most Beloved Outsider Artists". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  6. ^ Weber, Marcia (29 March 2014). "Mose Tolliver". Marcia Weber Art Objects. Marcia Weber Art Objects. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Mose Tolliver". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  8. ^ "Exchange: Self-Portrait". exchange.umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  9. ^ "Southern Visionary Art: Folk Art Online Gallery". www.southernvisionaryart.com. Archived from the original on 2017-09-22. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  10. ^ "mose tolliver | Minneapolis Institute of Art". collections.artsmia.org. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  11. ^ Called To Create: Black Artists of the American South, September 18, 2022 – March 26, 2023, curated by Harry Cooper
  12. ^ "What Carried Us Over: Gifts from the Gordon W. Bailey Collection • Pérez Art Museum Miami". Pérez Art Museum Miami. Retrieved 2023-09-29.
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  Media related to Mose Tolliver at Wikimedia Commons