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American artist Barkley L. Hendricks treats everyday style as dignity and portraiture as recognition. By isolating two Black women, identified as Susan (left) and Toni (right), on a gray, monochrome field, he turns the smallest choices like cap brim, belt buckle, and bracelet glint into signals of agency and self-definition.

Susan and Toni stand side by side against a deep, nearly solid dark background that makes their clothing and skin tones feel luminous. Susan, a dark-brown–skinned woman with a calm, steady expression, wears a pale blue short-sleeve button-up shirt with an open collar and a matching light blue cap. Her dark jeans sit high at the waist, held by a belt. Her stance is relaxed, with one hand in a pocket, and she wears bright white shoes. Toni, also dark-brown–skinned, faces forward with a direct, composed gaze. She wears a light green sleeveless top and a matching headscarf topped by a pair of round sunglasses. Her high-waisted dark jeans echo Susan’s, and she wears white shoes as well. Jewelry like rings, a bracelet, a watch, and earrings are painted with crisp precision, emphasizing texture such as metal catching light, fabric seams, and the subtle sheen of denim. The women feel life-size and present, their bodies upright and self-possessed, with no surrounding scene to distract from their shared presence.

The work is also unusual for Hendricks as a double portrait with two people sharing the frame without hierarchy, held together by rhythm (matching jeans, repeated whites, and parallel stances) while remaining distinctly themselves. Painted in the 1970s, when Hendricks was refining his life-size portraits of Black sitters, the picture pushes back against the long absence of Black women from “official” painting traditions ... and without asking them to perform anything except being exactly who they are. The result is intimate and iconic at once for a portrait of relationship, presence, and the quiet power of being seen on one's own terms.

American artist Barkley L. Hendricks treats everyday style as dignity and portraiture as recognition. By isolating two Black women, identified as Susan (left) and Toni (right), on a gray, monochrome field, he turns the smallest choices like cap brim, belt buckle, and bracelet glint into signals of agency and self-definition. Susan and Toni stand side by side against a deep, nearly solid dark background that makes their clothing and skin tones feel luminous. Susan, a dark-brown–skinned woman with a calm, steady expression, wears a pale blue short-sleeve button-up shirt with an open collar and a matching light blue cap. Her dark jeans sit high at the waist, held by a belt. Her stance is relaxed, with one hand in a pocket, and she wears bright white shoes. Toni, also dark-brown–skinned, faces forward with a direct, composed gaze. She wears a light green sleeveless top and a matching headscarf topped by a pair of round sunglasses. Her high-waisted dark jeans echo Susan’s, and she wears white shoes as well. Jewelry like rings, a bracelet, a watch, and earrings are painted with crisp precision, emphasizing texture such as metal catching light, fabric seams, and the subtle sheen of denim. The women feel life-size and present, their bodies upright and self-possessed, with no surrounding scene to distract from their shared presence. The work is also unusual for Hendricks as a double portrait with two people sharing the frame without hierarchy, held together by rhythm (matching jeans, repeated whites, and parallel stances) while remaining distinctly themselves. Painted in the 1970s, when Hendricks was refining his life-size portraits of Black sitters, the picture pushes back against the long absence of Black women from “official” painting traditions ... and without asking them to perform anything except being exactly who they are. The result is intimate and iconic at once for a portrait of relationship, presence, and the quiet power of being seen on one's own terms.

"Sisters (Susan and Toni)" by Barkley L. Hendricks (American) - Oil and acrylic on canvas / 1977 - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Richmond, Virginia) #WomenInArt #BarkleyLHendricks #Hendricks #BarkleyHendricks #art #artText #BlackArt #BlackArtist #AfricanAmericanArt #VMFA #VirginiaMuseumofFineArts

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Hendrick's Gin takes a 'completely opposite' turn with a crisp new look Hendrick’s is exploring its sweeter side without abandoning its roots. Nearly a decade after its last permanent addition, the brand has unveiled Another Hendrick’s, a white-bottled expression that lea...

Hendrick’s goes floral and cocoa-forward with Another Hendrick’s, its first new permanent gin in nine years. Orange blossom meets cacao in a white bottle that leans into contrast. #Hendricks #Gin #Branding #DesignNews #Chocolate community.designtaxi.com/topic/24060-...

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Friday night is G&T night! Watching some classic performances from Jules Holland’s Hootenanny 🎺 of years past. 🥒🍸🍓🧊

#Hendricks

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#CHASE #HENDRICKS
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A handle of Hendrick's gin sitting on our cutting board, flanked by three limes in a small, glass bowl, and a six pack of Canada Dry tonic water.

A handle of Hendrick's gin sitting on our cutting board, flanked by three limes in a small, glass bowl, and a six pack of Canada Dry tonic water.

Lol, my husband just received a package FROM HIS BOSS with all this in it. Happy New Year's indeed!

#WhatsYourPoison

#Hendricks

#gin

#HendricksGin

#G&T

#Gin&Tonic

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Deck Us All With Boston Charlie, by Lambert, Hendricks & Ross from the album Blues, Blues Christmas - Vol. 7 - Various Artists


🇺🇦 #NowPlaying on #KEXP's #Roadhouse

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross:
🎵 Deck Us All With Boston Charlie

#Lambert #Hendricks #Ross

▶️ 🪄 Automagic 🔊 show 📻 playlist on Spotify

▶️ Song/Cover on #Bandcamp:

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But, #Hendricks #Gin, of course. Hope you feel better.

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Ooooo,, #Bombay, and the British #Hendricks made me actually realize that a lot of #Gin flavors are from what you mix it with. I Don't drink much anymore but I prefer #Rum, the older the tastier just like #cognac.
I drank so much in France on one trip it all blurred LOL not in a good way. Nope

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#exclusive #pardon #nc #charlotte TikTok video by pullupspastapolitics

www.tiktok.com/t/ZTreoSut3/
#hendricks #motorsports of #nc backs #trump
#nokings #protestsmatter #trump #facist #nazi #america #ice #republicans #lies #fdt #nazi
#traitors #sellingout #america

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The genius zone: How to stop sabotaging your own success (Gay Hendricks) Do you ever find that just when things are going great—in your business or relationship—something happens to ruin it? You get sick, you pick a fight, or you start worrying about nothing. This isn't bad luck; it's a psychological barrier.In today's 5-minute briefing on Gay Hendricks's transformative book, "The Genius Zone," we explore the Upper Limit Problem. Discover why we subconsciously sabotage our own happiness when it exceeds our "thermostat setting," and learn the first step to breaking through to your true potential.

📣 New Podcast! "The genius zone: How to stop sabotaging your own success (Gay Hendricks)" on @Spreaker #commitment #creativity #development #excellence #flow #focus #genius #growth #happiness #hendricks #mindset #potential #productivity #psychology #sabotage

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Cubs mainstay Hendricks retiring after 12 years Longtime Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks is retiring after 12 years, 11 of which came with Chicago.See What Happened →

Cubs mainstay Hendricks retiring after 12 years

#Cubs #After #Baseball #Retiring #Hendricks

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BMUKN: Ihre Suche auf bundesumweltministerium.de Hier finden Sie die Suche zur BMUKN-Webseite.

Dazu kommt, dass sich die Aussagen der beiden Bundesministerinnen, Katherina #Reiche und Barbara #Hendricks komplett widersprechen.
Die eine will die Energiewende mehr oder weniger beenden, die andere
Will den weiteren Ausbau der erneuerbaren Energien und mehr Energieeffizienz.

(1/2)

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African American artist Barkley L. Hendricks created this 1973 full-length portrait of a Black woman standing against an unbroken pink field. Her skin is a warm coffee brown with subtle highlights along her shoulders, knees, and cheekbones. She wears a fitted white tank top printed with the word “SLAVE” across the chest, dark maroon shorts, and sleek knee-high black boots. Her arms are crossed; one leg angles forward so her weight sits on her back hip, projecting poise and refusal. A round afro frames her face. Large tinted sunglasses partially veil her eyes, yet her stance reads as unmistakably direct. The flat, shadowless background removes spatial cues, centering her presence. There are no props or context so that access begins with what she asserts and with what history inscribes upon Black women’s bodies.

The painting compresses centuries of commodification into the present tense. The title nods to “Bid ’Em In,” Oscar Brown Jr.’s searing performance of a slave auctioneer’s chant, a reminder that language itself once priced women’s lives. Hendricks seizes that history and counters it with Angie’s self-possession: crossed arms, planted feet, and cool fashion. His portraits, he said, were “about people that were part of my life… If they were political, it’s because they were a reflection of the culture we were drowning in.” 

Here, the politics arrive through clarity via the blunt word on the shirt colliding with a subject who will not bend to it. The pink field is both seductive and disarming, pulling our gaze to the body that history tried to name. Hendricks hallmark monochrome background, strips away distractions so that style, attitude, and dignity do the work of re-humanization. 

At over 6 feet tall, the canvas enforces a face-to-face encounter that museums long denied to Black women. Angie’s presence turns the auctioneer’s call inside out: the look, the stance, and the cool all bid us to witness not an object for sale, but a person on her own terms.

African American artist Barkley L. Hendricks created this 1973 full-length portrait of a Black woman standing against an unbroken pink field. Her skin is a warm coffee brown with subtle highlights along her shoulders, knees, and cheekbones. She wears a fitted white tank top printed with the word “SLAVE” across the chest, dark maroon shorts, and sleek knee-high black boots. Her arms are crossed; one leg angles forward so her weight sits on her back hip, projecting poise and refusal. A round afro frames her face. Large tinted sunglasses partially veil her eyes, yet her stance reads as unmistakably direct. The flat, shadowless background removes spatial cues, centering her presence. There are no props or context so that access begins with what she asserts and with what history inscribes upon Black women’s bodies. The painting compresses centuries of commodification into the present tense. The title nods to “Bid ’Em In,” Oscar Brown Jr.’s searing performance of a slave auctioneer’s chant, a reminder that language itself once priced women’s lives. Hendricks seizes that history and counters it with Angie’s self-possession: crossed arms, planted feet, and cool fashion. His portraits, he said, were “about people that were part of my life… If they were political, it’s because they were a reflection of the culture we were drowning in.” Here, the politics arrive through clarity via the blunt word on the shirt colliding with a subject who will not bend to it. The pink field is both seductive and disarming, pulling our gaze to the body that history tried to name. Hendricks hallmark monochrome background, strips away distractions so that style, attitude, and dignity do the work of re-humanization. At over 6 feet tall, the canvas enforces a face-to-face encounter that museums long denied to Black women. Angie’s presence turns the auctioneer’s call inside out: the look, the stance, and the cool all bid us to witness not an object for sale, but a person on her own terms.

“Bid ’Em In/Slave (Angie)” by Barkley L. Hendricks (American) - Oil and acrylic on canvas / 1973 - Sheldon Museum of Art (Lincoln, Nebraska) #WomenInArt #art #artText #artwork #BarkleyL.Hendricks #Hendricks #BarkleyHendricks #SheldonMuseumofArt #PortraitofaWoman #BlackArt #AfricanAmericanArtist

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I still believe that Baker Mayfield could be the best driver for #Hendricks. #NASCAR

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Save a $6.00 on a Hendricks Gin 1.75ml bottles with this virtual coupon! Refreshing taste, great deal!

📅 Valid thru 7/31/25. In-store only at Lowry Hill Liquors & Lakeside Wine + Spirits (MN).

#hendricks #gin #ginandtonic #craftcocktails #summer #Cheers

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Save a $6.00 on a Hendricks Gin 1.75ml bottles with this virtual coupon! Refreshing taste, great deal!

📅 Valid thru 7/31/25. In-store only at Lowry Hill Liquors & Lakeside Wine + Spirits (MN).

#hendricks #gin #ginandtonic #craftcocktails #summer #Cheers

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Hendricks mini gin on Nell's Good Omens shelf, nestled between Aziraphale and Crowley. 
Gin is for entertainment purposes only.
Drink responsibly.
Do not allow angel or demon to imbibe gin.

Hendricks mini gin on Nell's Good Omens shelf, nestled between Aziraphale and Crowley. Gin is for entertainment purposes only. Drink responsibly. Do not allow angel or demon to imbibe gin.

Might have bought meself a baby #Hendricks to celebrate my 3-day weekend.
Apparently received the blessings of present supernatural entities.
Still, drink responsibly.

#GoodOmens
#AziraphaleandCrowley
#Hendricksgin
#Ineededadayoff

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Barkley L. Hendricks was a contemporary American painter who made pioneering contributions to Black portraiture and conceptualism. While he worked in a variety of media and genres throughout his career (from photography to landscape painting), Hendricks' best known work took the form of life-sized painted oil portraits of Black Americans.

Hendricks was born in Philadelphia in 1945 and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Yale University. His work deals with contemporary black life and culture. He combines realism, Pop and abstraction to create a thoroughly modern, yet simultaneously timeless, style. But Hendricks does not simply illustrate his subjects. These life-sized figures facilitate a confrontation between the viewer and the painting. He portrays unique individuals that, through their poses and clothing, assert their style, individuality and self-awareness.

Estelle Johnson, a South Carolina native, was a student at Connecticut College, where Hendricks was Professor of Studio Art — teaching drawing, illustration, oil, and watercolor painting, plus photography, from 1972 until his retirement in 2010, when he became Professor Emeritus. He was a key figure in the Black Arts Movement and was the first African American to have a solo exhibit at the Frick Collection in Manhattan for his portraits of Black men and women.

A plain bright green background draws all attention to the caramel-skinned and beautiful Estelle, isolating her from any other context. She is wearing a black jumpsuit with flared legs and thin red and white stripes across the midriff. She's also wearing a dark headwrap and long earrings. She carries a brown shoulder bag. Her posture is relaxed, one hand resting on her hip and the other holding the bag's strap. Her expression conveys individuality, with her eyes lowered. The visually impactful painting conveys a sense of quietude and likely a reflection on Estelle’s style and identity during the 1970s.

Barkley L. Hendricks was a contemporary American painter who made pioneering contributions to Black portraiture and conceptualism. While he worked in a variety of media and genres throughout his career (from photography to landscape painting), Hendricks' best known work took the form of life-sized painted oil portraits of Black Americans. Hendricks was born in Philadelphia in 1945 and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Yale University. His work deals with contemporary black life and culture. He combines realism, Pop and abstraction to create a thoroughly modern, yet simultaneously timeless, style. But Hendricks does not simply illustrate his subjects. These life-sized figures facilitate a confrontation between the viewer and the painting. He portrays unique individuals that, through their poses and clothing, assert their style, individuality and self-awareness. Estelle Johnson, a South Carolina native, was a student at Connecticut College, where Hendricks was Professor of Studio Art — teaching drawing, illustration, oil, and watercolor painting, plus photography, from 1972 until his retirement in 2010, when he became Professor Emeritus. He was a key figure in the Black Arts Movement and was the first African American to have a solo exhibit at the Frick Collection in Manhattan for his portraits of Black men and women. A plain bright green background draws all attention to the caramel-skinned and beautiful Estelle, isolating her from any other context. She is wearing a black jumpsuit with flared legs and thin red and white stripes across the midriff. She's also wearing a dark headwrap and long earrings. She carries a brown shoulder bag. Her posture is relaxed, one hand resting on her hip and the other holding the bag's strap. Her expression conveys individuality, with her eyes lowered. The visually impactful painting conveys a sense of quietude and likely a reflection on Estelle’s style and identity during the 1970s.

Ms. Johnson (Estelle) by Barkley Hendricks (American) - Oil snd acrylic on linen canvas / 1972 - Gibbes Museum of Art (Charleston, South Carolina) #WomenInArt #ArtText #art #BarkleyHendricks #Hendricks #1970s #artwork #womensart #GibbesMuseum #portrait #AfricanAmericanArtist #AfricanAmericanArt

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It’s finally Friday evening after a long and stressful week, and Sara and I have some big decisions to make! 🤔 🥒 🍇🌱🍓🪻🍸 #Hendricks

@hendricksgin.bsky.social

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🇺🇦 #NowPlaying on BBC #Radio3's #JazzRecordRequests

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross:
🎵 Everyday I Have the Blues

#BBCRadio3 #Lambert #Hendricks #Ross

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The Three Graces, figures from Greek mythology, was a popular motif for artists throughout early modern European art—from Sandro Botticelli to Peter Paul Rubens to Antonio Canova. American artist Barkley L. Hendricks acknowledged the “direct influence” of the theme on this portrait of an unnamed Connecticut College student.

She had sent anonymous letters to Hendricks, and, after he learned her identity, she posed for him. “She was married at the time,” he recalled, and her husband came to the studio. “I told him, ‘I am interested in painting, not messing around,’ and the brother never came back. And I finished the piece.” 

Linda McClellan identified herself as the model, but disputed that she’d sent anonymous letters saying she, “never in my lifetime, wrote anonymous letters to anyone, but there were a lot of admiring young women there that one of them may have been writing him anonymous letters.”

She described it this way, “I’d been married for almost a year. My husband was in the military in Georgia, and he was just a second lieutenant; we didn’t have a lot of money. So, I was looking for jobs on campus, and one of the jobs was that you could model for the art classes. And I modeled for a couple of classes, and one of them was, well, no, the only one was his, I believe. At that point, he asked me would I pose for him. That’s how I met Barkley.

He had definite ideas about how he wanted me to look and dress. He said ‘bring some things over.’ Basically, long dresses. So, I brought the one that as you see in the painting and a few more things. But he preferred that dress. Even though I only wore my glasses for reading, he wanted me to wear those. And he wanted me to wear red fingernail polish which I really never wear. And the big hoop earrings, which I did wear.

I knew as the painting progressed, that it was going to be white-on-white. And uh, I didn’t know why because how are you going to see the dress? It’s white; it’s on white. But you know, it turned out ok.

The Three Graces, figures from Greek mythology, was a popular motif for artists throughout early modern European art—from Sandro Botticelli to Peter Paul Rubens to Antonio Canova. American artist Barkley L. Hendricks acknowledged the “direct influence” of the theme on this portrait of an unnamed Connecticut College student. She had sent anonymous letters to Hendricks, and, after he learned her identity, she posed for him. “She was married at the time,” he recalled, and her husband came to the studio. “I told him, ‘I am interested in painting, not messing around,’ and the brother never came back. And I finished the piece.” Linda McClellan identified herself as the model, but disputed that she’d sent anonymous letters saying she, “never in my lifetime, wrote anonymous letters to anyone, but there were a lot of admiring young women there that one of them may have been writing him anonymous letters.” She described it this way, “I’d been married for almost a year. My husband was in the military in Georgia, and he was just a second lieutenant; we didn’t have a lot of money. So, I was looking for jobs on campus, and one of the jobs was that you could model for the art classes. And I modeled for a couple of classes, and one of them was, well, no, the only one was his, I believe. At that point, he asked me would I pose for him. That’s how I met Barkley. He had definite ideas about how he wanted me to look and dress. He said ‘bring some things over.’ Basically, long dresses. So, I brought the one that as you see in the painting and a few more things. But he preferred that dress. Even though I only wore my glasses for reading, he wanted me to wear those. And he wanted me to wear red fingernail polish which I really never wear. And the big hoop earrings, which I did wear. I knew as the painting progressed, that it was going to be white-on-white. And uh, I didn’t know why because how are you going to see the dress? It’s white; it’s on white. But you know, it turned out ok.

“October's Gone...Goodnight” by Barkley L. Hendricks (American) - Oil & acrylic on linen canvas / 1973 - Harvard Art Museums (Cambridge, Massachusetts) #womeninart #art #BarkleyHendricks #Hendricks #womensart #HarvardArtMuseums #artwork #ArtText #AfricanAmericanArt #1970s #AfticanAmericanArtist

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Trump’s thirst for cheap oil irks an industry he loves to praise Oilfield costs are up, crude p...

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#Markets #Andy #Hendricks #Donald #Trump #oil #oil #price #OPEC #Route #66

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Agh!!!!! #Redsox bullpen is sick…..PS Well done to #Hendricks 🔥

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