The Harlem Renaissance Was Larger Than Harlem


Typically it’s the sleepers that stick with you. In “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism,” a sprawling exhibition on the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, it was a watercolor nonetheless life by Aaron Douglas. Born in Topeka, Kansas, in 1899, Douglas will be the most recognizable Black artist of the Nineteen Twenties and ’30s. His interesting mix of Artwork Deco and African American affirmation enlivened books, magazines, and public areas in his heyday, and work similar to his grand Works Progress Administration cycle, Points of Negro Life, on the one hundred and thirty fifth Road department of the New York Public Library (now a part of the Schomburg Heart), have saved him seen ever since.

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The watercolor, although, feels a world other than his luminous silhouettes and vivid storylines. It homes no heroic determine pointing towards the longer term, no shackles being solid off. As an alternative we get leafy branches splaying out from a pot beneath a tattered image hung askew on a wall. The branches may be magnolia—it’s laborious to inform—however artwork nerds can acknowledge the crooked picture-within-a-picture as a unfastened rendering of Titian’s The Entombment of Christ (circa 1520), which has been within the Louvre for hundreds of years. Turner copied it there in 1802, Delacroix round 1820, Cézanne within the 1860s. Douglas would have seen it when he was learning in Paris within the early Thirties.

The Titian might need attracted his consideration for a lot of causes—its show of crushing grief and voiceless religion, its sublimely managed composition, or the nice and cozy brown pores and skin that Titian gave the person lifting Christ’s head and shoulders, normally recognized as Nicodemus. The Titian connection isn’t highlighted on the Met, however in its personal indirect manner, Douglas’s watercolor encapsulates a very powerful lesson this present has to supply: Artwork’s relationship to the world is all the time extra sophisticated than you suppose.

Organized by Denise Murrell, who, because the Met’s first curator at massive, oversees initiatives that cross geographical and chronological boundaries, this exhibition has so much on its to-do listing. It needs to remind us of Harlem’s function as a cultural catalyst within the early Twentieth century, whereas exhibiting that these artistic energies prolonged far past the acquainted studying listing of Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, past literature and music, past the prewar many years, and past Higher Manhattan. It needs us to know that Black American artists had been studying from European modernists, and that European modernists had been conscious of Black contributions to world tradition.

The exhibit showcases an abundance of largely Black, largely American painters and sculptors, in addition to footage of Black topics by white Europeans, documentary pictures, movie clips of nightclub acts, and objects by artists of the African diaspora working in places from the Caribbean to the UK. Like an exploding social gathering streamer, it unfurls in a number of instructions from a place to begin sufficiently small to carry in your hand—on this case, the March 1925 particular problem of the social-work journal Survey Graphic, its cowl emblazoned with “Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro,” heralding a brand new cultural phenomenon.

That problem, edited by the thinker Alain Locke, contained sociological and historic articles by Black teachers together with poetry by the likes of Hughes and Jean Toomer. James Weldon Johnson, the chief secretary of the NAACP, provided an essay on the real-estate machinations that had made Harlem Black, and W. E. B. Du Bois contributed a parable highlighting the Black origins of American achievements in domains together with the humanities and engineering. The German-immigrant artist Winold Reiss offered eloquent portraits of celebrities such because the singer and activist Paul Robeson, together with these of assorted Harlem residents recognized by social function within the method of August Sander pictures—a pair of younger, earnest Public College Academics with Phi Beta Kappa keys dangling round their necks, a somber-faced Girl Lawyer, a dapper Faculty Lad. All of this made manifest the galvanizing assumption that what Black People possessed was not a tradition that had did not be white, however one wealthy with its personal inheritances and innovations; its personal brilliance, flaws, and challenges. And Harlem was its metropolis on a hill.

Working as an artwork instructor in Kansas Metropolis, Missouri, Aaron Douglas noticed Survey Graphic and moved to New York, the place he labored with Reiss and was mentored by Du Bois. When Locke expanded the Survey Graphic problem to e book size (his pivotal anthology, The New Negro: An Interpretation), Douglas offered illustrations.

Locke and Du Bois had been the mental stars of Black modernity, they usually believed within the energy of the humanities to remodel social notion. However the place Du Bois as soon as mentioned, “I don’t care a rattling for any artwork that isn’t used for propaganda,” Locke was intrigued by the oblique however ineluctable workings of aesthetics. A critical collector of African artwork, he noticed its extreme stylizations and habits of restraint as a taste of classicism, as disciplined in its manner as Archaic Greek artwork, and hoped it would present “a mine of contemporary motifs ” and “a lesson in simplicity and originality of expression” to Black People.

Locke additionally took notice of how European artists, tired of the verisimilitude, rational area, and propriety of their very own custom, had turn out to be smitten with Africa: how Picasso claimed the faceted planes of African masks as the place to begin of cubism; how German expressionists enlisted the emphatic angularity of African carvings of their pursuit of emotional presence. They may be woefully (or willfully) unaware of African objects’ unique contexts and meanings, however, as Locke acknowledged, an necessary bridge had been crossed. One thing definitively Black was inspiring the foremost white artists on the planet.

No artist fulfilled the dual mandates of clear messaging and savvy, African-influenced modernism extra efficiently than Douglas. The type he developed took suggestions from the easy-to-read motion of ancient-Egyptian profiles, the staccato geometries of African artwork, and the flat pictorial area of abstraction, and he put that type to work in narrative footage designed to encourage hope, pleasure, and a way of belonging to one thing bigger than oneself. Du Bois might need known as it propaganda, however below the identify “historical past portray,” this sort of factor had constituted essentially the most prestigious area of pre-Twentieth-century artwork. Consider Jacques-Louis David’s Oath of the Horatii (1784), Emanuel Leutze’s Washington Crossing the Delaware (1851), and John Martin’s cast-of-thousands blockbusters like The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum (1822).

stylized painting of biblical scene of Red Sea with beam of light
Aaron Douglas, Let My Folks Go, circa 1935–39 (The Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, Buy, Lila Acheson Wallace Reward, 2015 / Picture Courtesy of the Met / © 2024 Heirs of Aaron Douglas / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY)

Let My Folks Go (circa 1935–39) is one in all a number of majestic Douglas work included on the Met. Its design started as a tightly composed black-and-white illustration for James Weldon Johnson’s 1927 e book, God’s Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse (along with operating the NAACP, Johnson was a poet). Even throughout the extra expansive area of the colour portray, Let My Folks Go has so much occurring: Lightning bolts rain down from the higher proper; spears poke up from the decrease left as Pharaoh’s military fees in, heedless of the nice wave rising like a curlicue cowlick at heart stage. Slicing diagonally throughout all of this motion, a golden beam of sunshine involves relaxation on a kneeling determine, arms unfold in supplication. It’s a John Martin biblical epic stripped of Victorian froufrou, a modernist geometric composition with an ethical.

Formidable Black artists hardly wanted Locke to level them towards Europe. “The place else however to Paris,” Douglas wrote, “would the artist go who wished actually to study his craft and ultimately succeed within the artwork of portray?” Paris had the Louvre, it had Picasso and Matisse, it had necessary collections of African artwork, and for many years, it provided Black American artists each training and liberation. William H. Johnson arrived in 1926, Palmer Hayden and Hale Woodruff in 1927, Archibald Motley in 1929. Henry Ossawa Tanner, in France since 1891, was a chevalier of the Legion of Honor. The French weren’t freed from race-based assumptions, however their biases had been extra benign than these institutionalized in america—sufficient in order that Motley would later say, “They handled me the identical as they handled anyone else.”

One of many nice pleasures on the Met is watching these artists really feel their manner in a heady world. The setting for Motley’s vivid and bumptious dance scene Blues (1929) was a café close to the Bois de Boulogne frequented by African and Caribbean immigrants, the place he would sit and sketch into the evening. The topic is definitely trendy, as are Motley’s smoothed-out surfaces and abruptly cropped edges, however the attractive entanglement of musicians and revelers—the chromatic counterpoint of festive clothes and faces that are available in darkish, medium, and pale—remembers far older precedents, similar to Paolo Veronese’s The Wedding ceremony Feast at Cana (1562–63), the big canvas on the Louvre that individuals again into when straining for a glimpse of the Mona Lisa.

painting of crowded room of people dancing and musicians in a music club
Archibald Motley, Blues, 1929 (© Property of Archibald John Motley Jr. 2024 / Bridgeman Photographs / Picture courtesy of the Met / Picture by Juan Trujillo)

Woodruff and Hayden took up the theme of the cardboard recreation, intently related to Cézanne but additionally a long-standing trope in European artwork and African American tradition. In Hayden’s Nous Quatre à Paris (“We 4 in Paris,” circa 1930) and Woodruff’s The Card Gamers (1930), the teetering furnishings and tilted area arrange a pictorial instability that may be seen as a corollary of social pleasure and ethical peril, or simply the truth of odds all the time stacked in opposition to you. However whereas Woodruff’s jagged styling in The Card Gamers nods to German expressionism and the African sources behind it, the caricatured profiles in Hayden’s Nous Quatre à Paris name up racist antecedents like Currier and Ives’s once-popular Darktown lithographs. Superbly drawn in watercolor, it stays a stubbornly uncomfortable picture some 95 years after its creation.

William H. Johnson, for his half, spent his years in Europe largely making brushy landscapes with no apparent social messages. Paired with a woozy village scene by the French expressionist Chaim Soutine, an early Johnson townscape on the Met seems completed and unadventurous. However together with his spouse, the Danish textile artist Holcha Krake, Johnson developed an appreciation for the flat varieties and dramatic concision of Scandinavian people artwork—a reminder that Africa was not the one place the place modernists looked for outsider inspiration—and when he returned to the States, he started working in a jangly figurative mode with no direct antecedent. The dancing {couples} in his Jitterbugs work and display prints (1940–42) might look easy and cartoonish at first look, however these pointy knees and excessive heels are held mid-motion by means of Johnson’s sensible equipment of pictorial weights and balances.

painting of dancers with a man dipping a woman leaning back with one leg in air, with jazz instruments
William H. Johnson, Jitterbugs V, circa 1941–42 (Courtesy of the Met / Hampton College Museum Assortment)

There’s greater than a soupçon of épater le bourgeois in a lot of this, aimed not simply on the buttoned-up white world, but additionally on the primness of many members of the Black skilled class. Langston Hughes, writing in The Nation in 1926, expressed his hope that “Paul Robeson singing Water Boy … and Aaron Douglas drawing unusual black fantasies” may immediate “the smug Negro center class to show from their white, respectable, atypical books and papers to catch a glimmer of their very own magnificence.”

The pursuit of that glimmer accounts for one of many Met exhibition’s most exceptional facets—its preponderance of nice portraiture. There are portraits of the well-known, portraits by the well-known, portraits of oldsters and kids, and portraits of strangers. Some are massive and dazzlingly subtle: Beauford Delaney’s 1941 portrait of a unadorned, teenage James Baldwin in a storm of ecstatic shade is a harbinger of the gestural abstractions that Delaney would paint 10 years later. Some are tiny and blunt, just like the self-portrait by the self-taught Horace Pippin, celebrated as “the primary necessary Negro painter” by the artwork collector Albert C. Barnes due to his “unadulterated” ignorance of different artwork.

This abundance is exceptional as a result of portraiture was not central to European modernism or to Twentieth-century artwork on the whole. By no means essentially the most prestigious of genres (too compromised as work-for-hire), the painted portrait had misplaced its major raison d’être following the appearance of pictures within the 1830s and by no means actually recovered. Modernists went on drawing folks, however as a substitute of offering a physiognomy to be adopted, the sitter was now a toy to be performed with. Picasso’s drypoint of the Martinican poet and activist Aimé Césaire is consultant, trying very very similar to a Picasso and never a lot in any respect like Césaire. (The Met’s wall textual content refers to it as a “symbolic portrait.”) The title of the great Edvard Munch portray within the present initially emphasised the polygonal slab of inexperienced scarf at its heart, not the id of Abdul Karim, the person carrying it. We would nicely be inquisitive about Karim—Munch apparently encountered him in a touring circus’s ethnographic show, and employed him as a driver and mannequin—however Munch needs to steer us away from the distractions of biography and towards shade, type, and paint. It was a typical ploy. James McNeill Whistler, in any case, titled his well-known portrait of his mom Association in Gray and Black No. 1.

For Black artists and audiences, the scenario was totally different. Painted portraits have all the time been an extravagance, their mere existence proof of the worth of the folks in them. However after 500 years of Western portrait portray, Black faces remained, Alain Locke wrote, “essentially the most untouched of all of the out there fields of portraiture.” The American Folks Artwork Museum’s “Unnamed Figures: Black Presence and Absence within the Early American North”—which overlapped with the Met present for a month earlier than closing in March—aimed to fill in that lacuna, with uncommon commissioned portraits of Nineteenth-century Black sitters, extra quite a few examples of Black figures (usually kids) offered as trendy equipment in portraits of white sitters, and nonetheless extra dispiriting mass-market materials, like a pair of Darktown lithographs exhibiting grossly caricatured Black {couples} trying to play tennis.

Towards this background, portraiture—the quintessential celebration of the person—might serve a collective function. Removed from merely gratifying the self-importance of a sitter or the artistic ego of an artist, it was a correction to the canon, providing proof of how diverse magnificence, character, or simply memorable faces can look. The topic mattered, whatever the type by means of which she or he was offered. Laura Wheeler Waring was no avant-gardist—her mix of precision and reasonably flashy brushwork provides Lady in Pink Gown (circa 1927) the demeanor of a society portrait. The association is typical: The sitter is seen in profile, hair in a flapper bob, a twig of silk blooms tumbling over one shoulder like fireworks. However that shade of pink, which could look simpering on a blonde, acquires visible gravitas on this mannequin. She doesn’t smile or acknowledge the viewer. For all her youth and frothy apparel, she owns the area of the canvas in no unsure phrases. The costume is frivolous; the image isn’t.

Waring, like Munch, doesn’t give us a reputation to go along with the face. For contemporary artists—whether or not Black or white, male or feminine—fashions, most frequently younger ladies, had been an attribute of the studio, there to be dressed up and organized like a nonetheless life with a pulse. On the Met, they give the impression of being out at us from frames subsequent to titles that time to their hats and attire, their jobs and equipment. In some instances, an id is discoverable—Matisse’s Girl in White (1946) was the Belgian Congolese journalist Elvire Van Hyfte; Winold Reiss’s Two Public College Academics are thought to have been named Lucile Spence and Melva Worth—however many stay nameless. They’re ornamental markers for one thing bigger than themselves.

In distinction with Waring’s Lady in Pink Gown, Henry Alston’s Lady in a Purple Gown (1934) is stridently modernist, decreasing its topic to elemental varieties. The erect pose might have been borrowed from a Medici bride, however the elongated neck and slim head and shoulders had been impressed, we’re informed, by reliquary busts of the Central African Fang folks. For Alston, neither European modernism nor Fang custom was a mom tongue, which helps give the image its trendy edge. He’s much less within the distinctive options of a residing particular person than in how these options may serve new relationships of type and shade.

Different artists, notably the watercolorist Samuel Joseph Brown Jr., achieve inducing portraiture’s most magical impact—the eerie sense of an actual particular person on the opposite aspect of the body. His Lady in Blue Gown (1936) leans barely ahead, palms casually clasped, a half smile of anticipation on her lips, like somebody rapt in dialog. The play of sunshine and the puddled blues and browns are fantastically dealt with, however the enchantment can be social: She seems like somebody who could be enjoyable to know.

painting of side profile of young woman in elaborate pink dress with flowers over one shoulder
Laura Wheeler Waring, Lady in Pink Gown, circa 1927 (Laura Wheeler Waring Household Assortment / © Laura Wheeler Waring / Picture © The Metropolitan Museum of Artwork / Picture by Juan Trujillo)

Black portraiture additionally carries particular clout due to the existential penalties that bodily look can have in Black life. It was on the core of race-based slavery, and notion of shade, which is a painter’s inventory in commerce, retained its potential to dictate life’s outcomes. Picasso and Matisse may be cavalier about pores and skin tone—portray faces in white and yellow, or inexperienced and blue for that matter—however many Black artists acknowledged it as an optical property riddled with storylines. William H. Johnson gave every of the ladies in Three Youngsters (circa 1940) a different-colored hat and a unique tone of face. Waring (whose self-portrait resembles my third-grade instructor, a middle-aged girl of Scandinavian extraction) addressed the complexities of shade and id in Mom and Daughter (circa 1927), a double portrait whose topics exhibit the identical aquiline profile however totally different complexions. Archibald Motley’s The Octoroon Lady (1925) is rosy-cheeked and sloe-eyed, perched on a settee with the frozen expression of somebody anticipating unhealthy information. (Motley had a present for capturing this sort of social discomfort.) The title, which factors to the existence of 1 Black great-grandparent, all however dares the viewer to carry a forensic eye to her face, her palms, the curl of brown hair escaping from below her cloche.

It’s price noting that for a present about Black tradition within the first half of the Twentieth century, “Harlem Renaissance” provides little area to the continued horror of lynching, the on a regular basis brutality of Jim Crow, and the nationwide rise of the Ku Klux Klan, which reached peak membership across the time that Locke’s Survey Graphic was printed. Solely a handful of works explicitly tackle both violence or what Hilton Als, writing concerning the present in The New Yorker, known as the “soul-crushing” realities of the Nineteen Twenties for Black folks. (Probably the most wrenching of those items is In Reminiscence of Mary Turner as a Silent Protest Towards Mob Violence, a 1919 sculpture by the Rodin protégé Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller.) The emphasis right here is on company and survival, not trauma.

Right here, too, the portraits function as a reservoir of weighty which means, particularly these of aged family. Some sitters, like Motley’s Uncle Bob, had been sufficiently old to have been born into slavery. All are endowed by the artists with as a lot dignity because the conventions of portraiture can muster. Uncle Bob is carrying the plain garments of a farmer, however is seated like a gentleman, pipe in hand, with a e book and a vase of flowers at his elbow. John N. Robinson’s 1942 portray of his grandparents (titled, with curious formality, Mr. and Mrs. Barton) is stuffed with the hypertrophic element of a Holbein portray, and as in a Holbein, all the pieces signifies: Mrs. Barton’s look of sober persistence; Mr. Barton’s go well with, tie, and wing-tip sneakers; the oak desk and the sideboard with its pressed-glass pitcher and glasses; the framed studio pictures of what have to be their great-grandchildren on the wall.

painting of two older people in a dining room with large wooden table and paintings, a woman sitting in a carved dining chair and a man in 3-piece suit and tie standing next to her
John N. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Barton, 1942 (Clark Atlanta College Artwork Museum. Atlanta Artwork Annuals. 1945.004.)

William H. Johnson’s Mother and Dad (1944) departs from custom in type, however not in function. His gray-haired mom faces us from her purple rocking chair, palms folded, eyes extensive with one thing like fear. His deceased father presides from his portrait on the wall behind her, his handlebar mustache and celluloid collar many years outdated, however lasting proof of respectability. These folks don’t present numerous chuckle traces, nor the haughtiness endemic to a lot society portraiture. As an alternative there may be poise and forbearance, together with the data that they weren’t purchased low cost.

Harlem was pronounced the “Mecca of the New Negro” 99 years in the past. That cultural renaissance is as removed from us as we speak because the contributors to that Survey Graphic problem had been from the presidency of John Quincy Adams. The Met’s isn’t the primary massive present to survey Black artists’ achievements in that period, however it’s the most ambitiously international, a top quality that makes that vanished world really feel extra acquainted than we’d anticipate—a spot the place Black artists transfer backwards and forwards throughout the Atlantic, absorbing each affect on provide, dealing with questions of id, and struggling to make ends meet. Towards this, the abundance of pictures—the marching males in bowler hats, the marcelled girls who lunch, the couple posing in raccoon coats with their shiny roadster like Tom and Daisy Buchanan—works to remind us of the temporal distance that portray and sculpture can collapse.

Making an attempt to outline modernism is a thankless job. However a number of years in the past, the painter Kerry James Marshall provided this statement: “Trendy isn’t a lot an look or a subject. It’s, certainly, a means of all the time turning into and a negotiation for consideration between the modern artist’s ego and the legacy of earlier masterworks.” At its finest, what “Harlem Renaissance” gives is an opportunity to witness that turning into, to peek at these negotiations in progress, by means of the work of artists whose achievements have, in lots of instances, been insufficiently celebrated. Which brings us again to that Aaron Douglas nonetheless life.

Historical past portray went out of vogue within the Twentieth century as a result of trendy artwork stopped believing in easy tales. Douglas’s narrative work, fantastically designed and attention-grabbing although they are often, are throwbacks—spectacular, environment friendly, impersonal engines for delivering public-service messages. The nonetheless life is totally different. Positive, the sloping magnolia branches and off-kilter Titian conform to his love of diagonals on diagonals. However the issues represented usually are not abstractions; they’re objects that lived in the true world—the leaves are curled and brown in spots; the margins of the Titian are torn and stained. What’s pictured isn’t a lesson, however a meditation on studying, and on the numerous ways in which which means could make itself felt.

Douglas was a local Kansan. It’s potential that Titian’s Nicodemus echoed, for him, the abolitionist music “Wake Nicodemus,” whose hero, a slave “of African delivery,” was the namesake of a Kansas city based after the Civil Struggle by the previously enslaved. Or perhaps Douglas simply liked that portray within the Louvre. Or each.


This text seems within the July/August 2024 print version with the headline “The Harlem Renaissance Was Larger Than Harlem.” While you purchase a e book utilizing a hyperlink on this web page, we obtain a fee. Thanks for supporting The Atlantic.



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