High Museum Presents THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS – Picture Preview

High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), Modern Art, 1963, oil, ink, and crayon on paperboard, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, purchase with funds from Dan and Merrie Boone and the General Acquisitions Fund, 2007.90. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.

WHEN:

Nov. 14, 2025 - April 19, 2026

For more information visit the High Museum website.

WHERE:

High Museum of Art
​​1280 Peachtree Street, N.E.
​Atlanta, Georgia 30309

High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), Untitled (Face Flanked by Angels and Mandalas Collage), 1946–1968, pencil, ink, crayon, and oil on paperboard, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, purchase through funds provided by an anonymous donor to Collectors Evening 2011, 2011.4. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), Dream—Nov. 1968, 1980, oil, pencil, and crayon on paper, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, purchase and gift of Carl and Marian Mullis, 2023.162. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), Temple by the Sea, 1955, oil on canvas, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, gift of the Kallir Family in memory of John Kallir, 2025.60. Photo by Mike Jensen. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), UnDtled (Three Large Figures, Night Sky, and Stars Collage), 1967, oil, crayon, and pencil on paper and canvas, the John and Susan Horseman Collection, courtesy of the Horseman Foundation. Photo by Lisa Mitchell. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), A Castle, 1945, watercolor, ink, and pencil on gray United States Coast Guard paper, collecVon of Nathan Kernan. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), UnDtled (The Lions of Judah Collage), 1968, oil and crayon on paper and board, collecVon of ChrisVan Daniel. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), UnDtled (BuSerfly Form), 1949, crayon and pencil on paper, collection of Wendy Williams, New York. Photo by Christopher Burke. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), Untitled (Face with Tendrils), ca. 1944, crayon and pencil on paper, Museum of Modern Art, gift of Mrs. Nina Howell Starr. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), UnDtled (Statuary, Stars, and Flora), 1965, oil, gouache, and pencil on paper, collection of Wendy Williams, New York. Photo by Christopher Burke. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987), My Very First, 1935, pen and ink on paper, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, gift of Dorothea M. and Isadore Silverman. © The Estate of Minnie Evans.
High Museum THE LOST WORLD OF MINNIE EVANS
Nina Howell Starr (American, 1903–2000), Minnie Evans at Gatehouse, Airlie Gardens, 1962, gelaVn silver print, collecVon of Nathan Kernan. © 2025 Estate of Nina Howell Starr . Courtesy of MARCH gallery.

A spokesperson describes the event as follows:

“...Acclaimed American artist Minnie Evans (1892-1987) once described her drawings, filled with human, botanical and animal forms, as coming from “the lost world,” referring to “the nations destroyed before the Flood.” After her grandmother died in 1934 and the visions she had been experiencing since childhood became stronger, Evans went on to produce a large and celebrated body of work and in 1975 became one of the first Black artists to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Though she was lauded in her lifetime, she has not been the subject of a major exhibition since the 1990s. Inspired by its growing collection of her work, the High is organizing this nationally touring retrospective that brings together more than 100 of Evans’ fantastical drawings and puts them in the larger context of her extraordinary life. Presented chronologically beginning with Evans’ spare, line-driven compositions of the 1930s through to her colorful, complex compositions and lush, utopian mandalas of the 1960s, the exhibition, and its catalogue, will explore how Evans fits into expanded canons of Surrealism, how she was impacted by major historical events, and how the way she spent her days — first as a domestic worker and later as gatekeeper at North Carolina’s Airlie Gardens — impacted her art as much as her extrasensory experiences..."

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