Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Oil crayon and graphite on paper, signed at lower right, matted and framed below glass.
Sheet size 12 x 9 in.; Frame dimensions 22 x 18 in.
Private Collection, Wilmington, North Carolina
Minnie Evans was a self-taught African American artist renowned for her vivid, visionary drawings that seamlessly blend religious symbolism, natural motifs, and dreamlike imagery. Born in Long Creek, North Carolina, and raised in Wilmington, Evans began creating art in 1935 after experiencing a spiritual vision that compelled her to draw. Her works, often rendered in wax crayon, pencil, and later oil and collage, are characterized by symmetrical compositions featuring faces, eyes, flowers, and fantastical creatures. Evans drew inspiration from her deep Christian faith, ancestral stories, and the lush surroundings of Airlie Gardens, where she worked as a gatekeeper—a role that allowed her to sell her art directly to visitors.
Currently, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is showcasing
The Visionary Art of Minnie Evans, on view through October 26, 2025. This exhibition features 16 multimedia works on loan from the Cameron Art Museum in Wilmington, accompanied by letters and ephemera that illuminate Evans’s spiritual connection to nature and her community. The intricate, kaleidoscopic pieces reflect her inner world and the landscapes of her coastal North Carolina home.
Looking ahead, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta will present
The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans, from November 14, 2025, to April 12, 2026. This retrospective—the first major exhibition of Evans’s work in three decades—will feature over 100 pieces, showcasing her unique visual language. Following its debut in Atlanta, the exhibition will travel to the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in summer 2026, marking a return to the institution that hosted one of Evans’s first solo exhibitions in 1975.
Slight toning to the sheet and a few spots to the margin, loose in the frame.