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Howard University Receives $2.5 Million African-American Art Collection in Honor of Former Professor

Ronald W. Walters is remembered as a prolific, award-winning author and activist who published over 100 books and academic articles dissecting race and society in America. But to the students and faculty at Howard University, heโ€™s revered for the decades he served as both a professor and chair in the schoolโ€™s Department of Political Science.…

Ronald W. Walters is remembered as a prolific, award-winning author and activist who published over 100 books and academic articles dissecting race and society in America. But to the students and faculty at Howard University, heโ€™s revered for the decades he served as both a professor and chair in the schoolโ€™s Department of Political Science. And now, nearly a decade since his passing, his legacy at the university will live on thanks to a generous gift from his widow, Patricia Turner Walters.

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From WAMU:

An art collector and widow of a former Howard University professor has donated 152 works by African American artists to Howard University. The collection, valued at $2.5 million, includes some of the earliest surviving works by African Americans in this country.

โ€œMany of the earlier artistsโ€”what I call the mastersโ€”didnโ€™t make any money off their art,โ€ says Patricia Turner Walters, who started collecting in the late 1980s. One of her favorite pieces that sheโ€™s donating is the oldest work in her collectionโ€”an 1864 landscape by Robert S. Duncanson.

The collection, which includes photographs, original sculptures, rare prints, and other jaw-dropping finds from pivotal eras like the Harlem Renaissance, features contributions from artists such as Kehinde Wiley, Edward M. Bannisters, and Kerry James Marshall.

โ€œI could not be more delighted about the decision to give my art collection to Howard, the institution that my husband cared so deeply about,โ€ Mrs. Walters told WTOP. โ€œI always knew I wanted to do something like this to honor my husbandโ€™s legacy, but I never imagined that I would get to see it happen in my lifetime.โ€

Additionally, Howard revealed that it will establish the Ronald W. Walters Endowed Chair for Race and Black Politics โ€œwith the aim of spurring interdisciplinary collaborations on critical issues, especially those affecting Americans of the African diaspora.โ€

โ€œIt is an incredible honor to receive this generous gift of precious art from the Walters family,โ€ Wayne Frederick, President of Howard University, said. โ€œThis collection of sculptures and portraits and paintings will be an excellent complement to our gallery and a beneficial focus of training in our art history courses.โ€

Though most of the pieces were acquired after 2002, Mrs. Walters began her highly sought-after collection in the late 1980s. Instead of gifting it to one of the countless collectors or museums throughout the world, itโ€™s beautiful to hear that her art will instead be used to honor her late husband.

Howardโ€™s art gallery isnโ€™t big enough to display the collection in its entirety, but Mrs. Walters plans to unveil an exhibition thatโ€™s tentatively scheduled to arrive next spring.

โ€œItโ€™s an exciting time to be passionate about African-American art,โ€ she said.

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