
View of Selden Rodman Gallery of Popular Arts<\/p><\/div>\n
Overview<\/h3>\n
The Selden Rodman Gallery of Popular Arts is dedicated to the display of one of the foremost collections of popular arts, the Selden Rodman Collection opened at Ramapo College in 2001. The gallery was built to house the expanded collection, which was originally donated to the College in the early 1980s.<\/p>\n
Selden Rodman was a noted collector, poet and critic, and is widely considered to be the figure most responsible for spreading the legacy of Haitian art in the 20th<\/sup> century. \u00a0For more than sixty years Rodman, who died in 2002, immersed himself in Haitian life and culture. \u00a0His passion and that of his wife Carole was the doorway for many to discover the powerful visual expressions there, resulting in an explosion of interest in Haitian art in Haiti, the United States, and around the world.\u00a0 Rodman was co-director, alongside DeWitt Peters, of the renowned Centre d\u2019Art in Haiti, and also directed the famous murals at Cathedral Sainte Trinite (destroyed by the earthquake in 2010).\u00a0 Rodman\u2019s influential writings established a hierarchy of value and provided a flavorful and accessible record of Haitian art developments.<\/p>\nThe Selden Rodman Collection of Popular Arts is one of the foremost in the world devoted to Haitian art, but its range extends to include \u201cself-taught\u201d artists from North America, Brazil, Mexico, and elsewhere.\u00a0 In addition to rotating exhibitions from the collection, pieces from several related Ramapo collections occasionally go on view in the gallery including the Morris\/Svehla Collection and the Thompson Collection.\u00a0 The Rodman Gallery also features special exhibitions and loans from prestigious private collections, as well as exhibitions showcasing individual artists.\u00a0 Additionally, collection works are occasionally incorporated into exhibitions in the Berrie Center Kresge and Pascal Galleries, introducing more contemporary perspectives on self-taught and outsider art, while attracting new audiences.<\/p>\n
In recent years, as the historical significance of the collections and Rodman\u2019s contributions has increased, requests by scholars and others to utilize the collection have grown. Selections from the collection have also been featured in numerous important museum exhibitions and publications.<\/p>\n
Another Rodman Collection consisting of fewer works is housed in the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven. For more on Selden Rodman\u2019s life, please visit Yale University Library\u2019s digital archive of the Selden Rodman papers (http:\/\/discover.odai.yale.edu\/ydc\/Record\/3447771).<\/p>\n
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Hector Hyppolite, La Cuilleuse des\u00a0Fleurs<\/em>, oil, gift of Jonathan Demme<\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n

Levoy Exil, Banana Moon Queen<\/em>, oil, Morris\/Svehla Collection<\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n

Sen\u00eaque Obin, Haiti, Christophe, Family and Citadel<\/em>, 1960, oil on board, Rodman Collection<\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n