Bernice Lee ("Burr") Singer (born St. Louis, Missouri November 20, 1912; died Los Angeles, California November 18, 1992) was an American artist who worked in Social Realism subject matter, principally in watercolor, oil paint, and lithography.[1][2] Singer is noted as a painter of African Americans who "spent the entire 1930s painting African-Americans because she said that nobody was painting them realistically. Everything else was stereotypical, caricatures."[3]
References
- ↑ "Bernice Lee (Burr) Singer - Artist Biography for Bernice Lee (Burr) Singer". www.askart.com.
- ↑ "Burr Singer Biography – California Watercolor". www.californiawatercolor.com.
- ↑ https://ferris.edu/HTMLS/news/jimcrow/links/collections/pdfs-docs/alanpage.pdf
Further reading
- Hughes, Edan Milton (2002). Artists in California, 1786-1940: L-Z. Crocker Art Museum. p. 1026. ISBN 9781884038082.
- Landau, Ellen G. (1983). Artists for Victory: An Exhibition Catalog. Library of Congress. p. 104. ISBN 9780844404325.
- Mobile Museum of Art; Georgia Museum of Art (2003). Coming home: American paintings, 1930-1950, from the Schoen collection. Georgia Museum of Art. p. 298. ISBN 9780915977505.
External links
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