1 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I mean if you go back and read Langston Hughes' essay from 1929, 2 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I think it was, "The Negro Artist and Racial Mountain." 3 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 He opens it with a question from a young poet who approaches him and says, 4 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "I don't wanna be a black poet, I just wanna be a poet." But what does that mean, really. 5 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In his essay, he says, what that artist is really saying is that I wanna be a white artist. 6 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Because they are not burned by the problem of race. 7 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 To not be called a black artist seems to perform some kind of 8 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Liberating function in the minds of a lot of people. 9 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So who needs to not know, or who needs to not think of you as a black artist 10 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 in order for you to become a real artist? 11 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The painting is the painting. And black painters have done all kind of work all the time, 12 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So it's not a question of whether they represent or whether they don't represent. 13 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 But it's the treatment of whichever of forms they are engaging in. 14 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 That's what determines the value of the work. Not whether you call them a black artist or not.