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City Park in New Orleans in Orleans Parish, Louisiana — The American South (West South Central)
 

Fritz Bultman

Good News I, 1963

— On loan, courtesy of The Helis Foundation #ArtForAllNOLA —

 
 
Fritz Bultman Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Sean P. Flynn, April 1, 2026
1. Fritz Bultman Marker
Inscription.
About the Artist:
Born in New Orleans in 1919, Fritz Bultman was a noted early Abstract Expressionist painter, who also created prolific works on paper and sculptures during his long career. He studied in Munch under the noted abstractionist Hans Hoffman and later moved to New York, where he closely associated with the famed abstract expressionists of his time, including Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, William de Kooning, Lee Krasner and Helen Frankenthaler. With these fellow New York School artists, known as the "Irascibles," he boycotted the 1950 exhibition "American Painting Now" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art wherein they protested the museum's conservative policies in an open letter to the New York Times. This group of artists was photographed for the cover of Life magazine, but Bultman was studying bronze casting in Italy and was not included in the iconic image, which is credited with propelling many of them to stratospheric fame.

Bultman was represented by the legendary Martha Jackson Gallery in New York beginning in 1959. He was awarded a Fulbright scholarship, a Solomon Guggenheim fellowship and taught
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at Pratt Institute and Hunter College. At a time when Black Americans were prohibited from visiting museums in the South, Bultman and his wife were instrumental in the creation of a collection of Modern Art for Tougaloo College, a black institution in Jackson, Mississippi. This native son of New Orleans lived in both New York and Provincetown, MA, on Cape Cod, where he died in 1985. Bultman's artwork is included in major museum collections across the country, including the Phillips Collection, MoMA, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Good News I is one of the largest and, therefore, most rare sculptures ever created by Bultman. First exhibited in New York in 1963, Good News I won first prize in the Art Institute of Chicago's 67th Annual American Exhibition in 1964. Art critic Sanford Friedman suggested that this sculpture depicts some type of rite in progress, perhaps even inviting the viewer to become an inadvertent participant in a ritual. Good News I asks many unanswered questions, which heightens the mystery and excitement surrounding this sculpture and what emotions and ideas it inspires in viewers.
 
Erected by Hells
<i>Good News I</i> and Fritz Bultman Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Sean P. Flynn, April 1, 2026
2. Good News I and Fritz Bultman Marker
Foundation, City Park Conservancy.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: African AmericansArts, Letters, MusicEducation. A significant historical year for this entry is 1963.
 
Location. 29° 59.21′ N, 90° 5.854′ W. Marker is in New Orleans, Louisiana, in Orleans Parish. It is in City Park. It is on Victory Avenue 0.2 miles west of Roosevelt Mall, on the right when traveling west. The marker and sculpture are in front of the Oscar J. Tolmas Center, which is the entry for the New Orleans Botanical Garden. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 5 Victory Avenue, New Orleans LA 70124, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Louisiana’s River Parishes. It is also in the American South, specifically in the Deep South, on the Gulf Coast, and in the Great River Road Region. Globally, it is in North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Spain, the Viceroyalty of New France, the territory of the Mississippian Culture, the
<i>Good News I</i> image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Sean P. Flynn, April 1, 2026
3. Good News I
Louisiana Purchase, one of the Confederate States of America, and the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker: Donald Bradburn (about 600 feet away, measured in a direct line); Walter J. Cox and Wallace J. Cox (about 600 feet away); Duelling Grounds (approx. 0.2 miles away); Mississippi Meanders (approx. Ό mile away); a different marker also named Mississippi Meanders (approx. Ό mile away); Beatles Only Concert Performance in Louisiana (approx. 0.3 miles away); Allard Plantation (approx. 0.4 miles away); Marvin E. Thames (approx. half a mile away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in New Orleans.
 
Also see . . .  Fritz Bultman official site. (Submitted on April 7, 2026, by Sean P. Flynn of Oak Park, Illinois.)
 
Rear view of the sculpture image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Sean P. Flynn, April 1, 2026
4. Rear view of the sculpture
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on April 7, 2026. It was originally submitted on April 6, 2026, by Sean P. Flynn of Oak Park, Illinois. This page has been viewed 18 times since then. Photos:   1. submitted on April 6, 2026, by Sean P. Flynn of Oak Park, Illinois.   2, 3, 4. submitted on April 7, 2026, by Sean P. Flynn of Oak Park, Illinois.
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Jul. 16, 2026