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Art Institute of Chicago

Spotted

Eldzier Cortor — The Room No. VI
Eldzier Cortor

The Room No. VI

1948

Eldzier Cortor painted The Room No. VI in Chicago, where he had grown up and trained as an artist. The work exposes the impoverished living conditions many African Americans experienced on the city’s South Side in the early decades of the 20th century. As a result of racial bias in housing, black residents were often forced to live in what were called “kitchenettes,” namely, apartments subdivided into one-room spaces with limited access to kitchens or bathrooms. The nude woman anchoring the composition is flanked by three other individuals, whose cropped bodies extend across a single mattress. The artist emphasized pattern and texture, particularly the shapes and brilliant colors of the bed linens, floorboards, and wallpaper. Cortor’s deliberately decorative vocabulary recasts the scene’s bleak circumstances into a dynamic, luminous composition.

Medium
Oil and gesso on Masonite
Dimensions

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Spotted works by Eldzier Cortor

About this work

Eldzier Cortor, The Room No. VI, 1948

Eldzier Cortor painted The Room No. VI in Chicago, where he had grown up and trained as an artist. The work exposes the impoverished living conditions many African Americans experienced on the city’s South Side in the early decades of the 20th century. As a result of racial bias in housing, black residents were often forced to live in what were called “kitchenettes,” namely, apartments subdivided into one-room spaces with limited access to kitchens or bathrooms. The nude woman anchoring the composition is flanked by three other individuals, whose cropped bodies extend across a single mattress. The artist emphasized pattern and texture, particularly the shapes and brilliant colors of the bed linens, floorboards, and wallpaper. Cortor’s deliberately decorative vocabulary recasts the scene’s bleak circumstances into a dynamic, luminous composition.

Medium
Oil and gesso on Masonite
Dimensions
106.9 x 79.9 cm
Year
1948
Seen at
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Related themes

Intimate, Interior Scene, American, Room, Oil And Gesso, Post-War, Modern, Masonite, Earth Tones, Figurative

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago