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by Jim Fitch

Sample "Highwaymen" style painting
To see more paintings, go to www.floridahighwaymen.com
As seen in Antiques & Art Around Florida, Winter/Spring 1995
"'The
Highwaymen' is a name I've given to a group of black artists
working on the East coast of Florida from approximately 1955 to the
present. So called because their marketing and sales strategy consisted
of traveling the highways and byways of central Florida peddling their
paintings out of the back of their cars.
"Although I've identified nearly twenty of these artists still
living, they are, for the most part, unknown and have not received
credit for their contribution to Florida's art tradition. In fact, it
was these artists who were the bare bones beginning for Florida's
resident/regional art tradition. Further, their paintings met a growing
demand for regional Florida art and served to encourage what has become
the Indian River school of painting, perhaps the only school or movement
within the state that is recognizable as such.
"The story
of the Highwaymen begins with one man, now deceased, who has come to be
known as the dean of Florida landscape painters, A. E. "Bean"
Backus of Fort Pierce. I use the admittedly arbitrary date of 1950 as a
point of beginning because that was the year Bean married Patsy
Hutchinson and his career began to blossom. Unfortunately, Patsy died of
complications following heart surgery in 1955. Bean's love from then on
was painting. He devoted himself to his art, the daily consumption of a
quantity of rum, good conversation, and good friends.
"Although
Bean was a white Southerner during a time when racial equality was not
yet taken seriously, he was a friend to all. This characteristic,
coupled with a natural Bohemian bent, made him the perfect mentor to a
group of young black men who had noted the apparent ease with which he
made a living. Painting, for them, was perceived as being a way out of
the fields and groves.
"Most of
these young men were content to learn by osmosis, by observation. Bean's
studio became a place to congregate. One seemed more eager to learn than
the others. His name was Alfred Hair. To my knowledge, Alfred was the
only one of this group of black men to take formal lessons from Bean and
even accompanied him to the Bahamas on occasion.
"Apparently
Alfred had an entrepreneurial spirit because he later organized some of
the others who had hung around Bean's studio and began to "mass
produce" Florida landscape paintings. They were usually done on
Upsom board with whatever materials were at hand, including house paint.
"It seems
that Alfred employed specialists. Some were tree painters, some painted
only skies, others did water. Who signed the paintings was of little
concern to anyone.
"Unfortunately, Alfred Hair was killed in a barroom brawl. Lacking his
organizational skills, most of the others went their own ways and began
to paint and sell for themselves. Not all of these artists were content
to paint by formula. Some went on to develop their talents and skills
and have gained respectable reputations. Some retained the highway sales
technique.
"A few of
the more capable artists in this group are Harold Newton, now
incapacitated by a stroke, George Buckner, still painting and selling
near the thousand dollar range (George and his brother Ellis, now
deceased, once operated a gallery in Coral Gables) and Al Black, who in
my opinion most typifies the Highwaymen.
"Somewhere
I've heard it said that one sure road to success is to "find a need
and fill it". These black artists did just that. Whether we are
willing to accept their work as "art" or not is an argument I
won't make. I do know that by painting for the marketplace they
inadvertently created an awareness of and appreciation for Florida
regional art. They deserve recognition for that contribution."
Jim Fitch is the director of The
Museum of Florida's Art & Culture, an institution dedicated to
the artists of Florida whose work, in any medium, is visually linked to
Florida's history, heritage or environment.
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