Details

Title

Barbershop Stand and Shelf

Artist/Maker

Artist once known

Date

ca. 1940–1950

Medium

Polychromed wood and metal

Dimensions

49 1/2 x 26 x 13 inches

Credit

Purchase through funds provided by patrons of Collectors Evening 2019

Accession #

2019.190

Location

On View - Stent Family Wing, Skyway, Gallery 404

This rare example of Southern vernacular furniture was once used to hold haircutting and shaving implements in a Black-owned West Virginia barbershop. The stand and its freestanding shelf are constructed from reused pieces of old furniture. The artist added many bands of v-notched wood and finished the set with shades of red, blue, yellow, and black paint. Historically, barbershops have played an important function as a place of social networking and cultural production within African American communities, and they can also be sites of spiritual exchange. The High's collection includes work by other artists, such as Elijah Pierce and Ulysses S. Davis, who were barbers, ministers, and accomplished wood carvers. Although the artist behind this work remains unidentified, they appeared to have a spiritual dimension, as well, given the altar-like quality of this object.