- Barbara Chase-Riboud
Barbara Chase-Riboud (born
June 26 ,1939 ) is an Americannovelist ,poet ,sculptor andvisual artist best known for herhistorical fiction . Much of her work has explored themes related toslavery and exploitation.Chase-Riboud attained international recognition with the publication of her first novel, "Sally Hemings", in 1979. The novel has been described as the "first full blown imaginging" of Hemings' life as a
slave and her relationship with Jeffersoncite web
title = Imagining Sally Hemings
work = Frontline
publisher = WGBH educational foundation
url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/video/report3.html
accessdate = 2008-02-27] . In addition to stimulating considerable controversy, the book earned Chase-Riboud theJanet Heidinger Kafka Prize for the best novel written by an American woman. [cite web
title = Barbara Chase-Riboud
work = African American Literature Book Club
publisher = AALBC.com, LLC
url = http://aalbc.com/authors/barbara_chase-riboud.htm
accessdate = 2008-02-27] She has received numerous honors for her work, including theCarl Sandburg Prize for poetry and the Women's Caucus for Art's lifetime achievement award . In 1965, she became the first American woman to visit thePeople's Republic of China after the revolutioncite web
title = Barbara Chase-Riboud
work = Voices from the G
publisher = The University of Minnesota
url = http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Bios/entries/chaseribaud_barbara.html
accessdate = 2008-02-27] and in 1996, she was knighted by the French Government and received theOrdre des Arts et des Lettres ["People", International Herald Tribune, March 23 1996] She currently divides her time betweenParis ,France andRome ,Italy .Biography
Chase-Riboud was born in
Philadelphia ,Pennsylvania , the only child of Vivian May Chase, ahistology technician and Charles Edward Chase, a contractor.Smith, Jessie C. 1991. "Barbara Chase Riboud" in Notable Black American Women, p. 177.(Gale Cengage)] Chase-Riboud displayed an early talent for the arts and began attending the Fletcher Art Memorial School at the age of 8. Between 1947 and 1954, she continued her training at the Philadelphia Museum School of Art and won an award from "Seventeen" for one of her prints, which was subsequently purchased by theMuseum of Modern Art . Chase-Riboud went on to receive aBachelor of Fine Arts from the Tyler School atTemple University in 1957. In that same year, she won aJohn Hay Whitney fellowship to study at theAmerican Academy in Rome for 12 months. Here, she created her firstbronze sculptures and exhibited her work at theSpoleto Festival in 1957 as well as the American Academy and the Gallery L'Obeliso the following year.Smith, Jessie C. 1991. "Barbara Chase Riboud" in Notable Black American Women, p. 178.(Gale Cengage)] During this time she also had the opportunity to travel toEgypt where she discovered non-European art. In 1960, Chase-Riboud completed aMaster of Fine Arts fromYale University .After completing her studies, Chase-Riboud moved to
Paris where she eventually met French photo journalistMarc Riboud , whom she married in 1961. The couple had two sons and traveled extensively together on photo assignments inRussia ,India ,Greece andNorth Africa . In 1981, Chase-Riboud married her second husband, art-expert Sergio Tosi.Chase-Riboud began to garner broad attention from her artistic work in the latter half of the 1960s, launching exhibitions in the New York Architectural League Show (1965), the Festival of Negro Art in
Dakar (1966) and the L'Oeil Ecoute Festival inAvignon (1969). According to art critic Samella Lewis, Chase-Riboud's sculptures are remarkable for their "traditional lost-wax technique and include braided-, knotted-, and wrapped fiber areas that recall weaving and the fabric arts". [Lewis, Samella. 1990. ART: African American, p. 215. (Hancraft Studies)] Nancy Heller describes her work as "startling, ten-foot-tall scupltures that combine powerful cast-bronze abstract shapes with veils of fiber ropes made from silk and wool". [Heller, Nancy G. 1987. Women Artists: An Illustrated History. P. 191. (Cross River Press)] Over time, her sculptures began to reflect African symbols as well as contemporary political themes, such as her "Malcolm X " series (1969-1970).Literary career
Sally Hemings controversy
While Chase-Riboud first established her reputation as a sculptor, she gained wide-spread attention and critical acclaim for her writing with the publication of her novel "Sally Hemings" in 1979. The book, a fictional account of Hemings' sexual and romantic relationship with her Thomas Jefferson, earned the scorn of most Jefferson scholars who, at the time, denied that any such liaison took place. [Bernstein, Richard. "Jefferson and His Slave: A Relationship in Doubt", The New York Times, November 22 1987] Chase-Riboud, as well as other writers and scholars including
Winthrop Jordan andFawn M. Brodie maintained that Jefferson fathered five children with Hemmings, an American slave of mixed racial heritage. Hemings was nearly 30 years younger than Jefferson and happened to be the half-sister of his wife,Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson . Scholars such as Sidney P. Moss dismissed these claims as the "Jefferson miscegenation legend," contending that the Jefferson-Hemings affair was devoid of factual basis. The tide of public opinion began to change in 1998, whenDNA evidence reported in the scientific journal "Nature" was unable to rule out the possibility that Jefferson was the father of Hemings' children [Foster, EA; Jobling MA, Taylor PG, Donnelly P, de Knijff P, Mieremet R, Zerjal T, Tyler-Smith C (1998). "Jefferson fathered slave’s last child". Nature 396 (6706): 27–28. doi:10.1038/23835. PMID 9817200. ] In 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which oversees and operatesMonticello , concluded that "although paternity cannot be established with absolute certainty, our evaluation of the best evidence available suggests the strong likelihood that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had a relationship over time that led to the birth of one, and perhaps all, of the known children of Sally Hemings." [cite web
last = Jordan
first = Daniel P.
title = Statement on the TJF Research Committee Report on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings
work = Monticello
publisher = Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Inc.
date = 2000-01-26
url = http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/reportstatement.html
accessdate = 2008-02-28] Specialists, however, continue to debate whether Hemings and Jefferson engaged in a romantic and sexual relationship.(SeeSally Hemings andJefferson DNA data ).In 1991, Chase-Riboud won a landmark
copyright infringement trial against Granville Burgess, the author of a play about Hemings entitled "Dusky Sally".Cohen, Roger. "Judge Says Copyright Covers Writer's Ideas of a Jefferson Affair. The New York Times, August 15, 1991.] Chase-Riboud asserted that Burgess plagiarized her ideas by re-creating similar scenes and passages detailed in her book. Judge Robert F. Kelly concluded that while "laws were not enacted to inhibit creativity . . . it is one thing to inhibit creativity and another to use the idea-versus-expression distinction as something akin to an absolute defense -- to maintain that the protection of copyright law is negated by any small amount of tinkering with another writer's idea that results in a different expression." The resulting decision constituted a significant victory for artists and writers, reinforcing protection for creative ideas even when expressed in a slightly different form.Fact|date=February 2008Echo of Lions and Dreamworks suit
Chase-Riboud continued her literary exploration into slavery with her second and third novels. "Valide: A Novel of the
Harem " (1986) examined slavery in theOttoman empire , while "Echo of Lions" (1989) was one of the first in-depth fictional account of theAmistad slave-ship revolt. In 1997, Chase-Riboud sued the production studioDreamworks for $10 million on charges of copyright infringement. [Weinraub, Bernard. "Filmmakers Of 'Amistad' Rebut Claim By Novelist", The New York Times, December 4, 1997 ] The author claimed that thescreenplay forSteven Spielberg 's film "Amistad" plagarized from her novel. work = The Legal Information Institute
publisher = Cornell University Law School
url = http://www.law.cornell.edu/background/amistad/amistad2.html
accessdate = 2008-02-27] While Chase-Riboud eventually withdrew her charges, the suit resulted in an out of court settlement, the terms of which were undisclosed. [Weinraub, Bernard. "Plagiarism Suit Over 'Amistad' Is Withdrawn", The New York Times, February 20, 1998. ]Selected works
culptures
*"Confession for Myself" (1973)
*"Malcolm X" (1970)
*"Cleopatra's Cape" (1973)
*"Africa Rising" (1998)Novels
*"Sally Hemings: A Novel" (1979) ISBN 978-0312247041
*"Valide: A Novel of the Harem" (1986) ISBN 978-0688043346
*"Echo of Lions" (1989) ISBN 978-0688064075
*"The President's Daughter" (1994) ISBN 978-0345389701
*"Hottentot Venus: A Novel" (2004) ISBN 978-0385508568Poetry
*"From Memphis & Peking" (1974) ISBN 978-0394488998
*"Portrait of a Nude Woman as Cleopatra" (1987) ISBN 978-0688064037Further reading
*"Women Artists: An Illustrated History". Nancy Heller, 1987. (Cross River Press)
*"ART: African American". Samella Lewis, 1990. (Hancraft Press)
*"History of Art". H.W. Janson, 1995. (Harry N. Abrams, Inc.)
*"Creating Their Own
*"Barbara Chase-Riboud: Sculptor". Peter Selz & A. Janson, 1999 (Harry N. Abrams, Inc.) ISBN 978-0810941076
*"Notable Black American Women". Jessie Carnie Smith, 1991 (Gale Cengage) ISBN 978-0810347496References
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