Harlem Renaissance and black community in American literature Plan: Introduction 3



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Harlem Renaissance and black community in American literature

God's Trombones cover
The signature artist of the renaissance was Aaron Douglas, who turned away from traditional landscape painting after moving to New York City from Kansas and studying under the German immigrant Winold Reiss. Influenced by Art Deco, the flat profile designs of ancient Egyptian art, and what he called the abstract qualities of spirituals, Douglas created his own style of geometrical figural representation in dealing with “Negro” subject matter. His stylized, silhouette-like rendering of recognizably Black characters, imbued with qualities of spiritual yearning and racial pride, became closely identified with the Harlem Renaissance generally. In his illustrations for James Weldon Johnson’s book God’s Trombones, Douglas transformed white Christian iconography by putting Black subjects in central roles and evoking the identification of Black Americans with the suffering of Jesus. In the 1930s he turned more specifically to the collective historical experience of African Americans, his work subtly inflected with a new Marxist orientation, as in his well-known mural series Aspects of Negro Life (1934).
Watch sculptor Richmond Barthé working on a sculpture
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Watch William Ellisworth Artis working on a sculpture
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Augusta Savage: Realization
Despite Douglas’s importance, most Black artists of the 1920s spent little time in Harlem. Paris was the mecca of Black painters and sculptors in that decade. Yet traveling exhibits and contests in the United States encouraged Black artists in the late 1920s and early ’30s. Notable figures include the painter Palmer C. Hayden, who interpreted Black folklore and working-class life; Archibald J. Motley, best known for his paintings of urban Black social life and his realistic portraits of refined “New Negro” types; Augusta Savage and Richmond Barthé, both sculptors; and other visual artists such as Sargent Johnson, William H. Johnson, Hale Woodruff, Lois Mailou Jones, and James VanDerZee. Many of these artists produced their best work in the 1930s and helped cultivate the next generation. The Great Depression forced many artists to return “home” from Europe and brought them together in a critical mass previously unknown. New York City became in the 1930s a centre of art education with new galleries, schools, and museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, which had been founded in 1929. Most important for aspiring Black artists were the School of Arts and Crafts, founded by Savage, and the Harlem Community Art Center, of which Savage served as the first director after its creation in 1937 with Works Progress Administration (WPA) aid. In the middle and late 1930s, federal arts projects under the New Deal provided an unprecedented level of encouragement to the development of Black artists and helped start the careers of a new generation of artists that included Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Norman Lewis.



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