Sally Price

Sally Price, born Sally Hamlin(16 September 1943) in Boston, is an American anthropologist, best known for her studies of so-called “primitive art” and its place in the imaginaire of Western viewers.

Career

Price attended Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati and then Harvard College, where she majored in French Literature, graduating in 1965 after spending her junior year at the Sorbonne in Paris. In 1963 she married anthropology graduate student Richard Price and together they began conducting fieldwork together during summers – in a fishing village in Martinique (1963), in a village in rural Andalusia, Spain (1964), and among Zinacanteco Indians in Chiapas, Mexico (1965 and 1966) as part of a large Harvard-led project in the area.[1] After a brief trip to Suriname to explore the possibility of conducting long-term field research among the Saramaka Maroons of the interior, the Prices returned for a two-year residence in the village of Dangogo, on the upper Suriname River. This experience formed the foundation of much of their subsequent contribution to the discipline of anthropology and the field of African American studies.

Returning from Suriname, the Prices spent a year in the Netherlands, working with Dutch scholars of Maroon societies such as anthropologist A.J.F. Köbben.[2] It was only later that Sally Price attended graduate school, receiving her Ph.D in Cultural Anthropology from Johns Hopkins University in 1982. Two subsequent years of research in the Netherlands expanded relations with Dutch colleagues, and in 2000, Sally Price was honored by being elected to the prestigious Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen (Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences).[3]

After a dozen years at Johns Hopkins, followed by two years in Paris for a combination of teaching and research, the Prices returned to the fishing village in Martinique where they had begun their careers, establishing it as a base for a series of visiting appointments (at, for example, the University of Minnesota, Stanford University, Princeton University, and the Universidade Federal da Bahia in Brazil). In 1994, Sally Price took on a one-semester-a-year post as Duane A. and Virginia S. Dittman Professor of Anthropology and American Studies at the College of William and Mary, alternating her time between the College and her base in Martinique.[4]

In 2014 she was decorated by France's Ministry of Culture as "Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres" for her "contribution déterminante au rayonnement de la recherche anthropologique et au développement de la réflexion sur les musées de société."

Contributions

Price’s early work, which focused on the Maroons of Suriname, included Co-Wives and Calabashes, “an analysis of the ways that cultural ideas about the genders influence Saramaka women’s art and artistic activity and the complementary contributions that these artistic activities make to their social life,”[5] which won the University of Michigan’s Alice and Edith Hamilton Prize in Women’s Studies. Later, inspired by her experiences as a guest curator of Maroon art for a UCLA-based traveling exhibition,[6] she began exploring Western constructions of non-Western art. Her Primitive Art in Civilized Places (published in English, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese) has sparked much debate, “rattling glass cases throughout the art world,” as one critic put it.[7] In her role as a Caribbeanist, she co-edited (with Sidney W. Mintz) Caribbean Contours (dubbed “the best single book available today for courses on Caribbean society and politics”)[8] and together with Richard Price, she has written books on a variety of subjects, from artist Romare Bearden’s life in the Caribbean[9] to Maroon arts, folktale traditions, public folklore, the history of anthropology, art forgery, and artifact collecting (this last illustrated by Sally Price with 50 pen-and-ink sketches).[10] Her recent work has been based in two distant parts of France--French Guiana, where she continues her ethnographic studies of Maroon culture,[11] and Paris, where she has written on the politics, both personal and national, involved in the creation of Paris’s new museum of African, Asian, Oceanic, and Pre-Columbian art.[12]

Books

References

Notes

  1. Evon Z. Vogt, Bibliography of the Harvard Chiapas Project: The First Twenty Years, 1957-1977. Cambridge MA, Peabody Museum Press, 1987; Victoria R. Bricker & Gary H. Gossen (eds.), Ethnographic Encounters in Southern Mesoamerica: Essays in Honor of Evon Zartman Vogt, Jr. Albany: Institute for Mesoamerican Studies, SUNY, 1989.
  2. Frank Bovenkerk, Frank Buis, & Henk Tromp (eds.), Wetenschap en Partijdigheid: Opstellen voor André J.F. Köbben. Assen/Maastricht: Van Gorcum, 1990.
  3. "Sally Price" (in Dutch). Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  4. Carolyn J. Mooney, “Notes from Academe: On Martinique, 2 Scholars Explore the Permeability of Cultural Boundaries.” The Chronicle of Higher Education, 7 April 2000, p. B2
  5. Ellen Gruenbaum, “Gender, Power, and Traditional Arts.” Reviews in Anthropology 14(1), 1987, pp. 37-45.
  6. “Afro-American Arts from the Suriname Rain Forest.” Frederick S. Wight Gallery, UCLA; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts; The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore; American Museum of Natural History, New York (1980-1982).
  7. Jennifer Schuessler, “Inside Publishing.” Lingua Franca, September/October 1995, p. 26.
  8. Jorge Heine, The San Juan Star, 18 December 1986.
  9. Sally Price and Richard Price, Romare Bearden: The Caribbean Dimension. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006.
  10. Richard Price and Sally Price, Equatoria. New York, Routledge, 1992.
  11. Sally Price, “Into the Mainstream: Shifting Authenticities in Art. American Ethnologist 34/4(2007):603-620.
  12. Sally Price, Paris Primitive: Jacques Chirac’s Museum on the Quai Branly. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. See also "The Enduring Power of Primitivism" in Gitti Salami & Monica Blackmun Visonà (eds.), 'A Companion to Modern African Art' (West Sussex: Wiley Blackwell, 2013), pp. 447 465.

External links

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