Jacki Lyden http://kccu.org en Around The River Bend, A Flood Of History http://kccu.org/post/around-river-bend-flood-history The Bark River is my backyard, childhood river. And yet, in a lifetime of travel, I'd never explored it.<p>I knew it carved the land from the Ice Age to settlement times, from the Black Hawk War of 1832 (in which young Abraham Lincoln appears) to the era of grist mills. But the Bark also flows past impressive Indian mounds. Sun, 28 Oct 2012 19:18:00 +0000 Jacki Lyden 22036 at http://kccu.org Around The River Bend, A Flood Of History The Landscape Art Legacy Of Florida's Highwaymen http://kccu.org/post/landscape-art-legacy-floridas-highwaymen If you traveled by way of Florida's Route 1 in the '60s and '70s, you might have encountered young African-American landscape artists selling oil paintings of an idealized, candy-colored, Kennedy-era Florida. They painted palms, beaches, poinciana trees and sleepy inlets on drywall canvases — and they came to be known as the Highwaymen. The group made thousands of pictures, until the market was saturated, tastes changed, and the whole genre dwindled.<p><strong>Roadside Innovation</strong><p>The story of the Highwaymen is one of beauty and heartbreak. Sat, 22 Sep 2012 20:40:00 +0000 Jacki Lyden 19937 at http://kccu.org The Landscape Art Legacy Of Florida's Highwaymen Meet Al Black: Florida's Prison Painter http://kccu.org/post/meet-al-black-floridas-prison-painter In the 1960s, Al Black could be found cruising up and down Route 1 in his blue-and-white Ford Galaxy — with a trunk full of wet landscape paintings.<p>At the time, he was a salesman who could snatch your breath away and sell it back to you. As artist Mary Ann Carroll puts it, he could "sell a jacket to a mosquito in summer."<p>"A salesman is a con-man," Black readily admits himself today. He's a storyteller. And does he have stories to tell.<p>Black was born on a plantation in Mississippi. One day, he says, a crew boss came by, needing more hands to pick crops. Thu, 05 Jul 2012 07:15:00 +0000 Jacki Lyden 14843 at http://kccu.org Meet Al Black: Florida's Prison Painter The Highwaymen: Segregation And Speed-Painting In The Sunshine State http://kccu.org/post/highwaymen-segregation-and-speed-painting-sunshine-state In the 1960s and '70s, if you were in a doctor's office, or a funeral home, or a motel in Florida, chances are a landscape painting hung on the wall. Palms arching over the water, or moonlight on an inlet. Wed, 04 Jul 2012 16:24:00 +0000 Jacki Lyden 14828 at http://kccu.org The Highwaymen: Segregation And Speed-Painting In The Sunshine State Art, Race And Murder: The Origins Of Florida's 'Highwaymen' http://kccu.org/post/art-race-and-murder-origins-floridas-highwaymen The story of The Highwaymen is one of biracial friendships and lingering racism, of painting and a murder — culminating in a contemporary clash over an artistic legacy.<p>Only loosely allied, they are credited with churning out some 200,000 landscape paintings in the area of Fort Pierce, Fla., since the 1960s. The strategy behind their enterprise: Paint a lot, and paint fast. Often, the oil paintings were sold before they had even dried. Wed, 04 Jul 2012 09:08:00 +0000 Jacki Lyden 14814 at http://kccu.org Art, Race And Murder: The Origins Of Florida's 'Highwaymen'