Join author William Dunlap for a book signing during Ogden After Hours, featuring Deltaphonic, on March 26, from 6 to 8 p.m. Dunlap will be signing his book, "Pappy Kitchens and the Saga of Red Eye the Rooster." O. W. “Pappy” Kitchens (1901–1986) was born in Crystal Springs, Mississippi, and began painting at age sixty-seven. His self-taught, narrative, visual art springs directly from the oral tradition of parable and storytelling with which he grew up. A self-declared folk artist, Kitchens claimed, “I paint about folks, what folks see and what folks do.” His magnum opus, The Saga of Red Eye the Rooster, was painted between 1973 and 1976 and presents a homespun Pilgrim’s Progress in the form of a beast fable. Kitchens’s most ambitious allegorical work, this fable consists of sixty panels, each one measuring fifteen inches square, composed of mixed materials on paper, and executed in three groups of twenty. Kitchens follows Red Eye from foundling to funeral, exploring the life of this extraordinary bird. Red Eye’s quasi-human behavior inevitably maneuvers him into conflicts with antagonists of all sorts. He encounters violence, avarice, lust, greed, and most of the other seven deadly sins, dispatching them in heroic fashion until he finally succumbs to his own fatal flaw. In addition to The Saga of Red Eye the Rooster, the volume features personal photos of Kitchens as well as additional works by the artist. Written by distinguished artist and Kitchens’s once son-in-law William Dunlap, with an introduction by renowned curator Jane Livingston, “Pappy Kitchens and the Saga of Red Eye the Rooster” brings much-needed exposure to the life and work of a key Mississippi figure. + GOOGLE CALENDAR
Thursday, Mar 26, 6-8 PM
Book Signing with Author William Dunlap
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
More Info
More Very Local
New Orleanians, Visual Arts
Beaucoup power: Meet the artist behind the unique billboard in Treme
New Orleans artist / musician / rapper Nesby Phips has rented the space to share a message. With clear, bold, white words on a black backdrop, he has spelled out,...
Many would call the 7th Ward one of New Orleans’ iconic Creole neighborhoods, and civil rights attorney A.P. Tureaud is one of the neighborhood’s iconic native sons. While he became...
Mardi Gras, Mardi Gras Indians
PHOTOS: Cancelled, Cold and COVID - Mardi Gras 2021 Prevails
Even though Mardi Gras 2021 looked different, you can't keep Carnival out of the hearts of New Orleanians. Here's a look at Mardi Gras Day during COVID-19.
Bars, Food/Drink, Know Your NOLA
A product of the pandemic, Pepp's bar is a neighborhood partnership
This Marigny dive bar has rolled with the punches since the beginning of the pandemic, creating a parklet to serve customers and teaming up with a neighborhood restaurant for food.