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Bill Walker Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1927 - d. 2011

Bill Walker was born in 1927 in Birmingham, Alabama. An only child, he was initially raised by his grandmother in a desperately poor ghetto of "bleak little shacks" with outhouses known as Alley B. In 1938, he was sent north to Chicago to join his mother who worked as a seamstress and hairdresser. They lived in a variety of places in the Washington Park area and he eventually attended Englewood High School. Walker was drafted in WWII and re-enlisted to receive college tuition under the GI Bill. He was a mail clerk, then an MP with the 99th Pursuit Squadron, the all black command under which the Tuskegee Airmen fought. In 1947, he painted his first murals while in the military. While stationed in Columbus, Ohio he became friends with Samella Lewis. He often stayed with her family and assisted her on a few commissions.

In 1949 he enrolled in the Columbus Gallery School of Arts. He began studying commercial art and later switched to a concentration in fine art. Walker won the school's 47th Annual Group Exhibition "Best of Show" award in 1952. He was the first African-American to do so. Walker credits Joseph Canzani with encouraging his interest in mural painting. At school he studied the early Renaissance fresco painters. It wasn't until after his graduation that he learned about the Mexican muralists - Diego Rivera, David Siqueiros, and Jose Clemente Orozco. He was particularly impressed with the way they incorporated structural elements in to their compositions. Walker also cited Jacob Lawrence, Charles White, and William McBride as important influences.

After graduation, Walker headed to Nashville and Memphis where he painted murals for a Baptist church, a local Elks club, and the Flamingo Club, a nightclub near Beale Street. While researching and preparing to complete another mural of a plantation scene, he had an important epiphany. He realized he needed to create art that spoke for those who had been marginalized. Walker returned to Chicago and worked as a decorative painter for a variety of north-side interior designer firms.

By the mid 1960s, Walker was formulating an idea for a mural in the area near 43rd and Langley which never came to fruition. However in May of 1967, the Organization of Black American Culture was formed and the opportunity again arose. OBAC was cofounded by artist Jeff Donaldson, sociologist Gerald McWorter, and Hoyt Fuller, editor of Negro Digest, and was dedicated to visual art, music, writing, dance, and theater. Walker floated the idea of a mural at the location. The group couldn't just simply paint a mural and leave it at that. Walker knew the neighborhood well and secured permission from business owners, community leaders, and street gangs. The residents were a big part of the process as well. Jeff Donaldson and Eliot Hunter, Wadsworth Jarrell, Barbara HoguJones, Caroline Lawrence, Norman Parish, Edward Christmas, Myrna Weaver and many others contributed sections to the wall. Walker was responsible for the section on religious leaders. Walker had originally painted the portraits of Black Muslim leader Elijah Muhammad, Nat Turner, and Wyatt Walker, a New York minister and civil rights activist, but when threatened with a lawsuit by Muhammad, who did not want to be pictured on the same wall as Malcolm X, he erased the section and replaced it with a composition of Nat Turner.

The members of the OBAC eventually drifted apart- some, Donaldson, Jarrell, Jones, and Lawrence formed AfriCobra- and Walker, who remained in the neighborhood, came to be the "guardian of the wall." As a result of the impact the Wall of Respect had in Chicago, similar walls were created in cities across the country. Walker worked on the Wall of Dignity in Detroit and the Wall of Truth, which was located across the street from the Wall of Respect. He co-founded the Chicago Mural Group (now known as the Chicago Public Art Group) with John Pitman Weber and Eugene Eda and completed more than 30 murals over the next four decades in working-class Chicago neighborhoods. In 1975, he formed his own mural group known as International Walls, Inc.

Walker turned increasingly to studio art in the late 70's. Chicago State University held the exhibition, Images of Conscience: The Art of Bill Walker in 1984. The exhibit consisted of 44 paintings and drawings in three series: For Blacks Only; Red, White, and Blue, I Love You; and Reaganomics. The show was not without controversy as the images presented were not pretty, but dark representations of urban black neighborhoods. The exhibition traveled to the Vaughn Cultural Center, St. Louis and the Paul Robeson Cultural Center, Pennsylvania State University.

Most recently, Walker's work was presented in the exhibition Bill Walker: Urban Griot, held at the Hyde Park Art Center, November 2017 - April 2018.

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      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, untitled, Paris Street Scene
        Dec. 14, 2024

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, untitled, Paris Street Scene

        Est: $800 - $1,200

        William "Bill" Walker 1927-2011 untitled, Paris Street Scene 1955 tempera on textured fabric (silk) 19 x 12-1/4 inches signed Provenance: private collection, Chicago, IL Walker was a regular supplier of original paintings to Northside Chicago interior design firms. Often he worked in a decorative manner, and substituted Paris subjects for his normal Chicago scenes because they were more salable to that audience.

        Black Art Auction
      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled
        May. 20, 2023

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled

        Est: $4,500 - $6,500

        William "Bill" Walker 1927-2011 Untitled 1963 Oil on canvas 38 x 42 inches Signed Walker '63 PROVENANCE: Antonio Santillan lived in Hyde Park (Chicago) in the 1960s and was the original purchaser. Antonio brought the paintings to Los Angeles, CA and passed them to his son, Marcos Santillan when he died in 2014. Marcos died unexpectedly the following year and they were willed back to the current owner (Antonio's ex-wife). Antonio Santillan was born in Argentina but grew up in Chicago. He worked for Ford Motor Company as an ad director. His father owned a meat packing business on the south side of Chicago. He eventually became a screenwriter and film director and once interviewed Malcolm X for a project. He moved to Los Angeles and wrote the screenplays to the movies "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry" and "Viva Kneivel." The two early works included in this auction by Bill Walker are rare and very desirable.

        Black Art Auction
      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Looking
        May. 20, 2023

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Looking

        Est: $4,500 - $6,500

        William "Bill" Walker 1927-2011 Looking c. 1965 oil on masonite 32 x 24 inches Gallery label verso, Momentum Two, Bill Walker, with title. PROVENANCE: Antonio Santillan lived in Hyde Park (Chicago) in the 1960s and was the original purchaser. Antonio brought the paintings to Los Angeles, CA and passed them to his son, Marcos Santillan when he died in 2014. Marcos died unexpectedly the following year and they were willed back to the current owner (Antonio's ex-wife). Antonio Santillan was born in Argentina but grew up in Chicago. He worked for Ford Motor Company as an ad director. His father owned a meat packing business on the south side of Chicago. He eventually became a screenwriter and film director and once interviewed Malcolm X for a project. He moved to Los Angeles and wrote the screenplays to the movies "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry" and "Viva Kneivel." The two early works included in this auction by Bill Walker are rare and very desirable.

        Black Art Auction
      • William "Bill" Walker (Chicago, 1927-2011), "Two Figures in a Cotton Field," 20th c., oil on canvas, signed "W. Walker" lower left, unframed, H.- 12 1/2 in., W.- 16 1/4 in.
        May. 13, 2023

        William "Bill" Walker (Chicago, 1927-2011), "Two Figures in a Cotton Field," 20th c., oil on canvas, signed "W. Walker" lower left, unframed, H.- 12 1/2 in., W.- 16 1/4 in.

        Est: $1,000 - $2,000

        † William "Bill" Walker (Chicago, 1927-2011), "Two Figures in a Cotton Field," 20th c., oil on canvas, signed "W. Walker" lower left, unframed, H.- 12 1/2 in., W.- 16 1/4 in.

        Crescent City Auction Gallery
      • Bill Walker, 1927-2011, The Twins
        Jul. 17, 2021

        Bill Walker, 1927-2011, The Twins

        Est: $1,500 - $2,500

        Bill Walker 1927-2011 The Twins c. 1940 oil on board 20 x 29 inches signed

        Black Art Auction
      • Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled (Portrait)
        Jul. 17, 2021

        Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled (Portrait)

        Est: $1,000 - $2,000

        Bill Walker 1927-2011 Untitled (Portrait) c. 1955 mixed media 11.5 x 9 inches signed and dated

        Black Art Auction
      • Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled (Portrait)
        Jul. 17, 2021

        Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Untitled (Portrait)

        Est: $1,000 - $2,000

        Bill Walker 1927-2011 Untitled (Portrait) 1955 oil on board 11.5 x 10.75 inches signed and dated

        Black Art Auction
      • Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Eating Watermelon
        Jul. 17, 2021

        Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Eating Watermelon

        Est: $1,000 - $2,000

        Bill Walker 1927-2011 Eating Watermelon c. 1955 crayon on artist board 10 x 25 inches signed

        Black Art Auction
      • Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Boy on Buckboard
        Jul. 17, 2021

        Bill Walker, 1927-2011, Boy on Buckboard

        Est: $600 - $800

        Bill Walker 1927-2011 Boy on Buckboard 1955 crayon on board 18.75 x 12 inches signed

        Black Art Auction
      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Three Deacons
        May. 22, 2021

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Three Deacons

        Est: $2,500 - $3,500

        William "Bill" Walker 1927-2011 Three Deacons c. 1955 oil on canvas 27 3/4 x 18 inches signed lower right Provenance: The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art Illustrated: The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art, Thom Pegg, Tyler Fine Art, St Louis, MO, p. 133

        Black Art Auction
      • William Aiken Walker (American, 1927-2011) Negro Cabin in the South
        May. 03, 2021

        William Aiken Walker (American, 1927-2011) Negro Cabin in the South

        Est: $6,000 - $8,000

        William Aiken Walker (American, 1927-2011) Negro Cabin in the South oil on board signed WAWalker. (lower left) 6 x 12 inches. Based off examination from photographs, John Fowler has confirmed the present work will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonne of the artist's work. Provenance: Kennedy Galleries, Inc., New York Property from a Private Collector, Atlanta, Georgia

        Hindman
      • William Kentridge: Fire Walker (2011) by Oliver Barstow and Bronwyn Law-Viljoen
        Apr. 21, 2021

        William Kentridge: Fire Walker (2011) by Oliver Barstow and Bronwyn Law-Viljoen

        Est: R1,000 - R2,000

        Barstow, O. and Law-Viljoen, B, (2011). William Kentridge and Gerhard Marx: Fire Walker. South Africa: Fourthwall Books. Signed by William Kentridge and Gerhard Marx and dated 2011.

        Aspire Art
      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Free Now, Acrylic on canvas, 44 x 38 inches
        Nov. 14, 2020

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927-2011, Free Now, Acrylic on canvas, 44 x 38 inches

        Est: $10,000 - $15,000

        William "Bill" Walker 1927-2011 Free Now Acrylic on canvas 1971 Signed and dated. In August of 1967, on the southeast corner of 43rd and Langley Streets, Chicago, Illinois, a group of African American artists came together to paint the landmark mural that sparked a people’s art movement. William “Bill” Walker was instrumental in the creation of the Wall of Respect. The purpose of the project was to “honor our Black heroes and to beautify our community.” It soon became, in the words of fellow artist Jeff Donaldson: “An instantaneous shrine to Black creativity, a rallying point for revolutionary rhetoric and calls to action, and a national symbol of the heroic Black struggle for liberation in America.” Cities across American followed suit with murals of their own. Bill Walker continued to paint murals in the city of Chicago, as he had painted them before 1967, solidifying his role as father of the community mural movement - capturing the “human side of street life in the city.” Bill Walker was born in 1927 in Birmingham, Alabama. An only child, he was initially raised by his grandmother in a desperately poor ghetto of “bleak little shacks” with outhouses known as Alley B. In 1938, he was sent north to Chicago to join his mother who worked as a seamstress and hairdresser. They lived in a variety of places in the Washington Park area and he eventually attended Englewood High School. Walker was drafted in WWII and re-enlisted to receive college tuition under the GI Bill. He was a mail clerk, then an MP with the 99th Pursuit Squadron, the all black command under which the Tuskegee Airmen fought. In 1947, he painted his first murals while in the military. While stationed in Columbus, Ohio he became friends with Samella Lewis. He often stayed with her family and assisted her on a few commissions. In 1949 he enrolled in the Columbus Gallery School of Arts. He began studying commercial art and later switched to a concentration in fine art. Walker won the school’s 47th Annual Group Exhibition “Best of Show” award in 1952. He was the first African-American to do so. Walker credits Joseph Canzani with encouraging his interest in mural painting. At school he studied the early Renaissance fresco painters. It wasn’t until after his graduation that he learned about the Mexican muralists - Diego Rivera, David Siqueiros, and Jose Clemente Orozco. He was particularly impressed with the way they incorporated structural elements in to their compositions. Walker also cited Jacob Lawrence, Charles White, and William McBride as important influences. After graduation, Walker headed to Nashville and Memphis where he painted murals for a Baptist church, a local Elks club, and the Flamingo Club, a nightclub near Beale Street. While researching and preparing to complete another mural of a plantation scene, he had an important epiphany. He realized he needed to create art that spoke for those who had been marginalized. Walker returned to Chicago and worked as a decorative painter for a variety of north-side interior designer firms. By the mid 1960s, Walker was formulating an idea for a mural in the area near 43rd and Langley which never came to fruition. However in May of 1967, the Organization of Black American Culture was formed and the opportunity again arose. OBAC was cofounded by artist Jeff Donaldson, sociologist Gerald McWorter, and Hoyt Fuller, editor of Negro Digest, and was dedicated to visual art, music, writing, dance, and theater. Walker floated the idea of a mural at the location. The group couldn’t just simply paint a mural and leave it at that. Walker knew the neighborhood well and secured permission from business owners, community leaders, and street gangs. The residents were a big part of the process as well. Jeff Donaldson and Eliot Hunter, Wadsworth Jarrell, Barbara HoguJones, Caroline Lawrence, Norman Parish, Edward Christmas, Myrna Weaver and many others contributed sections to the wall. Walker was responsible for the section on religious leaders. Walker had originally painted the portraits of Black Muslim leader Elijah Muhammad, Nat Turner, and Wyatt Walker, a New York minister and civil rights activist, but when threatened with a lawsuit by Muhammad, who did not want to be pictured on the same wall as Malcolm X, he erased the section and replaced it with a composition of Nat Turner. The members of the OBAC eventually drifted apart- some, Donaldson, Jarrell, Jones, and Lawrence formed AfriCobra- and Walker, who remained in the neighborhood, came to be the “guardian of the wall.” As a result of the impact the Wall of Respect had in Chicago, similar walls were created in cities across the country. Walker worked on the Wall of Dignity in Detroit and the Wall of Truth, which was located across the street from the Wall of Respect. He co-founded the Chicago Mural Group (now known as the Chicago Public Art Group) with John Pitman Weber and Eugene Eda and completed more than 30 murals over the next four decades in working-class Chicago neighborhoods. In 1975, he formed his own mural group known as International Walls, Inc. Walker turned increasingly to studio art in the late 70’s. Chicago State University held the exhibition, Images of Conscience: The Art of Bill Walker in 1984. The exhibit consisted of 44 paintings and drawings in three series: For Blacks Only; Red, White, and Blue, I Love You; and Reaganomics. The show was not without controversy as the images presented were not pretty, but dark representations of urban black neighborhoods. The exhibition traveled to the Vaughn Cultural Center, St. Louis and the Paul Robeson Cultural Center, Pennsylvania State University. Most recently, Walker’s work was presented in the exhibition Bill Walker: Urban Griot, held at the Hyde Park Art Center, November 2017 - April 2018. “The artist-to-people communication is the kind of relationship that would place the artist and his work in a position of respect, pride, and dignity—all of which he should have. These views are not based on the feelings of an idealist hoping for something that cannot be or believing in something he has never experienced. They are founded on the grounds of experience. Experience of talking with people in a community during the time that the art project is in progress; of discussing the conditions of their problems and the world and trying to realize how art can become more relevant to the people of the world.” —Bill Walker, Black Artists on Art, v. 2, Lewis/Waddy, 1971 44 x 38 inches

        Black Art Auction
      • William "Bill" Walker, 1927 - 2011, Luck of the Draw, Oil on Board, 24-1/8 x 22 inches
        May. 16, 2020

        William "Bill" Walker, 1927 - 2011, Luck of the Draw, Oil on Board, 24-1/8 x 22 inches

        Est: $3,000 - $5,000

        William "Bill" Walker 1927 - 2011 Luck of the Draw Oil on Board 1954 Signed and dated Provenance: The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art, San Francisco, CA Literature: The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art, Tyler Fine Art, 2019, p. 131. 24-1/8 x 22 inches

        Black Art Auction
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