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Modern & Post War

Ground-Breaking Art

By: Patrick Pacheco

July 2001

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In Ken Burns’ documentary, "Jazz," much is made of the fact that Louis Armstrong’s early stint in reform school—where he picked up a trumpet for the first time—changed not only the legendary musician’s life but the very pulse of American popular music. Arguably, Jacob Lawrence’s enrollment in a Harlem after-school program in arts and crafts at age 13 in 1930 also was a pivotal cultural event. For what the trumpet was to Armstrong, the paint brush was to Lawrence: the instrument by which he communicated the joys, struggles and triumphs of a people and of the country they helped to build.

That narrative, in all its rhythms and riffs, is told in a major retrospective of Lawrence’s work organized by Washington, D.C.’s Phillips Collection, where it will be on view through August 19th before traveling to the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City (November 8–February 3, 2002), the Detroit Institute of Arts (February 23–May 19, 2002), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (June 16–September 8, 2002) and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (October 6, 2002–January 5, 2003). "Over the Line: The Art and Life of Jacob Lawrence" features more than 200 paintings and drawings of the first African-American artist to win mainstream acceptance. In 1942, he became the first African-American to exhibit at a major New York commercial gallery: the Edith Halpert Gallery in New York City. The Phillips was planned on the occasion of last fall’s publication of The Complete Jacob Lawrence, a two-volume catalog raisonne that, like the exhibition, traces the evolution of Lawrence’s maverick vision expressed in works teeming with life—workers, musicians, still-lifes, self-portraits, historical figures—a prodigious output that ended only with his death last year at age 82.

"I hope that people coming to the show will get an understanding of Lawrence’s fluid and flexible invention," says Elizabeth Hutton Turner, senior curator at Phillips and organizer of the exhibition. "He transposed and translated elements from theater, music, jazz and poetry. Through simplification and selection, elimination and emphasis, Lawrence used abstract styles to their maximum advantage. If you think about how he narrows his range of color, selects a series of flat color patterns of tempera, it comes as close as the visual arts can come to language."

Lawrence never was locked into the social realism with which he grew up—in part due to his exposure to the Bauhaus concept and vision of his mentor, Josef Albers, who recruited him to teach at Black Mountain College in North Carolina. But he also never once succumbed to the dictatorial trends of the art world. His work was a synthesis of abstraction and an autobiographical message through which he was able to evaluate himself, his community and his environment. The Phillips exhibition fully traces that singular and lively journey through his 20th-century output. Since it coincided with the African-American community’s growing consciousness to become empowered and create its own identity, Lawrence clearly saw his role in expressing those aspirations, having basked in the creative glow of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1930s.

The beauty of that struggle, which was Lawrence’s own self-declared leitmotif, first was explored dramatically—and cinematically—in his famous "The Migration of the Negro," the 60 panels on hardboard detailing the Black diaspora from the South to the North, which paralleled his own family’s experience. It was this 1940–41 body of work, in fact, which was split evenly between the Museum of Modern Art and collector Duncan Phillips, and which again will be united for this exhibition.

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