Skip to main content
Fever Within
Ronald Lockett
Photo by Gavin Ashworth
Fever Within
Fever Within
Ronald Lockett
Photo by Gavin Ashworth
Fever Within Ronald Lockett Photo by Gavin Ashworth
© Artists Rights Society
Record Details

Fever Within

Artist ((1965–1998))
Date1996
Place/RegionBessemer, Alabama
MediumRusted sheet metal, with nails on plywood
Dimensions53 1/4 × 51 × 5 1/2"
Credit LineGift of Ron and June Shelp
Accession number2012.18.3
Copyright© 2016 Estate of Ronald Lockett / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Description

Ronald Lockett spent many hours at the house of his great-grandmother Sarah Dial Lockett, who also raised her nephew, renowned African American artist Thornton Dial. The Dials became an extended family for Lockett, whose parents divorced when he was young, and they encouraged his art-making. Lockett lived in Bessemer all his brief life, which was tragically shortened by an AIDS-related pneumonia. His art is filled with autobiographical references, social implications related to the black experience, and environmental concerns. As reported by author Paul Arnett, he “was intensely concerned with eschatology, which is the study of the end of things, whether the end of an individual life, the end of the age, or the end of the world.” This notion is brilliantly embedded in the oxidized tin Lockett used for a late series of works. The material, which he salvaged from a decrepit tin barn once owned by the Dials, “was the DNA of the story his art had always told. . . .The autumnal colors and blotchy decay of the rust/paint suggest continual rebirth.” The figure in the center of Fever Within—made of nailed strips of tin—apparently represents a woman that Lockett knew from his AIDS clinic who was fighting the disease. This is the third piece in a series that depicts a similar subject. Coincidentally, the silhouette recalls the posture and inner world of the naked woman in the famous Renaissance masterpiece The Tempest by Giorgione, and it summons the mysterious atmosphere of that philosophic-poetic painting.

Valérie Rousseau, “Fever Within,” exhibition label for Self-Taught Genius: Treasures from the American Folk Art Museum. Stacy C. Hollander and Valérie Rousseau, curators. New York: American Folk Art Museum, 2014.

Object information is a work in progress and may be updated with new research. Records are reviewed and revised, and the American Folk Art Museum welcomes additional information. 

To help improve this record, please email photoservices@folkartmuseum.org


Ronald Lockett, “Untitled,” Bessemer, Alabama, c. 1988, Paint and wire mesh on plywood, 43 × 42…
Ronald Lockett
c. 1988
2013.5.8
Artist unidentified, “Sturgeon”, United States, 20th century, Paint on wood, sheet metal, nails…
Artist unidentified
20th century
1992.10.15
Earl Eyman, “Snap Toy Dancers of Couple,” Drumright, Oklahoma, 20th century, Paint on carved wo…
Earl Eyman
20th century
1999.26.36
Untitled (Negative Image of 2 Deer)
Ronald Lockett, (1965–1998)
Photo by Adam Reich
Ronald Lockett
n.d.
1996.17.6
Contrary to Hearsay, He Wasn't the Devil
Jean-Marcel St. Jacques, (b. 1972)
Photo by José And…
Jean-Marcel St. Jacques
2014
2014.18.1
"Philadelphia Wireman", (dates unknown), “Untitled,” Philadelphia, c. 1970–1982, Metal wire, re…
Philadelphia Wireman
c. 1970–1982
2001.29.5
 Sam Doyle, “Alligator”, Georgia, n.d., Tar on wood, oil paint, nails and metal, 7 × 55 3/4 × 1…
Sam Doyle
n.d.
2002.4.6
Untitled (Traps)
Ronald Lockett, (1965–1998)
Photo by Adam Reich
Ronald Lockett
1994
2012.18.4
Alejandro Sandoval, (1896–1989), “Lion,” Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1985, Enamel paint on cottonwood…
Alejandro Sandoval
1985
1985.20.36
Unicorn in a Garden
Edgar Tolson
Photographed by Gavin Ashworth
Edgar Tolson
1972
1996.12.1
Thousand Tounges
Bessie Harvey
Photographed by Gavin Ashworth
Bessie Harvey
c. 1986
1998.10.25