Artwork Description
Beverly McIver – Is This Love?
Dimensions: 24 x 30″ unframed
Year: 1999
Medium: oil on canvas
A Greensboro native most well known for her diverse and at times confronting self portraits, McIver’s work is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian, the North Carolina Museum of Art, the Weatherspoon Art Museum, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the NCCU Museum of Art, the Asheville Museum of Art, The Crocker Art Museum, the Nelson Fine Arts Center Art Museum at Arizona State University, the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, the Cameron Art Museum and the Mint Museum as well as significant corporate and private collections.
McIver is currently the Esbenshade Professor of the Practice in Studio Arts At Duke University. She was the Suntrust Endowed Chair Professor of Art at North Carolina Central University, 2007-2014. Prior to this appointment, McIver taught at Arizona State University in Tempe, AZ. for twelve years, Duke University, North Carolina State University, and North Carolina Central University. She has also held residencies at many of the nation’s leading artist communities, including YADDO, the Headland Center for the Arts, Djerassi, and Penland School of Arts and Crafts. She has served on the board at Penland, and currently serves on the board of directors at YADDO in Saratoga Springs, NY.
Curator, Kim Boganey, who curated Beverly McIver’s first exhibition in Arizona more than a decade ago was the curator and exhibition organizer of Beverly McIver’s retrospective titled “Beverly McIver: Full Circle”, which premiered at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary art, and which is touring nationally.
Boganey was the Director of Public Art in Scottsdale before moving on to be the director of the Ontario Museum. She also authored the monograph “Beverly McIver: Full Circle” with essays included by top African American feminist writer Michelle Faith Wallace, Faith Ringgold’s daughter.
Smithsonian and Metropolitan Museum of Art fellow and leading African American art historian, Richard Powell, also contributed an essay to Boganey’s book on McIver. Boganey lectures about Beverly McIver’s artwork around the country and is a foremost expert on her work.