Donate to the Registry,
August 18

Simmie Knox
*Simmie Knox was born on this date in 1935. He is an African-American artist.

From Aliceville, Alabama, his father was a carpenter and mechanic. After Knox's parents divorced he lived with his father's sister on a farm in Leroy, Alabama. This arrangement occurred while his father lived and worked in another city until young Knox was nine. As a boy his first love was baseball, which he played with friends one of which was Hank Aaron. Yet during a game, a ball hit Knox in the eye forcing him to put the game down for more than a year.

A doctor recommended that Knox find something to do that would help his eyes to focus, and the nuns at his community school (Heart of Mary School) started him drawing. Later Knox was biology major at the University of Delaware, but the pictures he created were so skilled he changed his major to art education. Knox wanted to teach art in public schools, which he did for 18 years. He also taught at various colleges, universities, and public schools in Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Washington, D. C. during the 1970s, and exhibited as an abstract artist and worked for the Museum of African Art in Washington, D. C.

In 1971, he participated in the Thirty-Second Biennial of Contemporary American Painting at The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C. with his abstract art. A graduate of Tyler School of Art at Temple University (BFA, Magna Cum Laude, MFA) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Knox as an artist has specialized in oil portraiture for over twenty years. He turned to portraiture because he found that there is nothing more challenging and interesting to paint than the human face.

A father of three, he feels that a good portrait is the most difficult thing for an artist to complete successfully, because one must get an accurate likeness and create a good painting. Somehow you must communicate a subject's character, spirit, and personality; and everything must speak the energy of the subject.

Knox’s portrait paintings include: Frederick Douglas (1975), Alex Haley (1977), Justice Thurgood Marshall (1989), Bill Cosby and family (1983-1991; 12 portraits), Muhammad Ali (1995), Bishop John T. Walker (1995), Mr. And Mrs. Henry Aaron (1996). Knox was commissioned to paint the White House portrait of President William J. Clinton and more.

Reference:
Simmie Knox

 

    

The African American Registry®, 
a resource on African American History,
is a 
501(c) (3) non-profit education organization
Our Mailing address is  
P.O.  Box  19441
Minneapolis, MN  55419
Fax:  (612) 825-0598
Email us at
info@aaregistry.org

The African American Registry® Copyright 2005, 2006
Privacy Policy