Talk:Georgette Seabrooke

December 15th, 2015 Edit
Zzurad and NWBritton made edits on this page (Georgette Seabrooke) in order to improve this page, include specific details and information as a part of Women in American Art History @PAFA The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Our instructor is SBeetham. — Preceding unsigned comment added by NWBritton (talk • contribs) 22:47, 10 December 2015 (UTC)

Students edited this page after extensive research as part of my course, "Women in American Art." Their changes went through several drafts and I approved the final version. For more information about the course, please see my user page. Sbeetham (talk) 15:52, 11 December 2015 (UTC)

The edits of December 15, 2015 add some interesting details about Seabrooke's early life. However these edits do not cite sources, and thereby got this article the dreaded "does not cite sources" tag. Furthermore the edits removed much information about Seabrooke's life (which did have in-line citations), including that she grew up in Yorkville, Manhattan, and that she graduated Washington Irving High School. It also removed information about the recent restoration of her best known work. (I had added most of the deleted information). The edits also added some information about that work (Recreation in Harlem) that is repeated in slightly different form in a paragraph that is still in the article. Furthermore the edits use non-standard grammar, punctuation, and capitalization. If you tell me where you found the added information, I will merge it with the old information, clean up the grammar, and take off the "does not cite sources" tag. Finally I will restore the old information and remove the unsourced stuff. Peter Greenberg (talk) 04:00, 3 February 2016 (UTC)

Wiki Education assignment: 20th Century African American Art
— Assignment last updated by Emehlee (talk) 22:00, 3 November 2023 (UTC)


 * This article references the the academic article "Forever Free": Art by African-American Women, 1862-1980 an Exhibition by Susan Willand Worteck published in Feminist Studies rather than the exhibition catalog Forever Free: Art by African-American Women, 1862-1980 edited by Arna Alexander Bontemps. Include proper citation with page number. WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 00:17, 26 May 2023 (UTC)