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Tag: Josephine Baker

  • How a First-of-Its-Kind Exhibition About African American Artists in the Nordic Countries Came to Be

    How a First-of-Its-Kind Exhibition About African American Artists in the Nordic Countries Came to Be

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    “Nordic Utopia?” brings together works from sixteen Nordic and American collections to highlight the hidden history of African American visual and performing artists in the Nordic nations. Jim Bennett of Photo Bakery for the National Nordic Museum

    Three years in the making, our exhibition “Nordic Utopia? African Americans in the 20th Century,” now on view at the National Nordic Museum in Seattle, examines the hidden history of African American visual and performing artists, writers, activists and scholars who first sought training and launched careers in American urban centers but left for the Nordic countries when travel abroad introduced them to an environment conducive to creative freedom. The curatorial narrative weaves together episodes in the biographies of Josephine Baker, Anne Wiggins Brown, Dexter Gordon, William Henry Johnson, Walter Williams and many others.

    “Nordic Utopia?” is the first exhibition of its kind to explore this topic—an alternative narrative to the oft-told tale of African American expats in Paris—and the result of a collaboration between us, the authors of this article: African American Studies professor Ethelene Whitmire and Leslie Anderson, Chief Curator of Seattle’s National Nordic Museum. The show’s genesis involved scholarly study, support and loans from both individuals and institutions and, maybe most surprisingly, a successful eBay alert.

    In 2019, Ethelene gave a talk on African Americans in Denmark at the National Nordic Museum. We struck up a conversation about painter William Henry Johnson, and then in 2021, Leslie proposed partnering on an exhibition inspired by Ethelene’s extensive research. This had long been a dream of Ethelene’s, and she accepted the invitation without hesitation. We soon decided to broaden our project scope beyond Denmark to include Finland, Norway and Sweden, and a preliminary checklist formed from works that Ethelene had become acquainted with during her research: a painting of a jazz quartet by Clifford Jackson, a painting by Herbert Gentry that also captured music-making titled Copenhagen and a mixed-media masterpiece imagining children amid flowers and butterflies in a halcyon landscape by Walter Williams.

    A museum exhibition of paintings and artifacts in a space with red wallsA museum exhibition of paintings and artifacts in a space with red walls
    An installation view of “Nordic Utopia?,” on at the National Nordic Museum through July 21. Jim Bennett of Photo Bakery for the National Nordic Museum

    In her biographical research in Denmark, Ethelene met several individuals who would go on to participate in the project. Ronald and Edith Burns and photographer Kirsten Malone—wife of journalist and co-representative of the Black Panthers in Scandinavia, Leonard “Skip” Malone—lent to the exhibition. Malone shared photographs of Skip, as well as of their friends jazz tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon and bebop jazz singer Babs Gonzales. Ethelene was also familiar with the documentary films Temi i mol (1962) and Anden mands land (1970), produced and aired by the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, which would help contextualize the creative work represented in the checklist.

    Leslie began searching Nordic and American public and private collections for works of art that could tell this story and expand on the checklist. The Johnson Collection in South Carolina was an early supporter of the project, lending a mixed-media image of sunflowers by Williams, which would become the visual identity of the exhibition. They also lent an oil painting by Johnson of Kerteminde Harbor in Denmark. She secured a loan of the same motif depicted in a watercolor, also by Johnson, which was recently acquired by the National Gallery of Art in DC. While in Sweden to conduct grant-funded research, Leslie met with Jo Widoff, head of the International Art Collection at Moderna Museet to discuss the project. Moderna Museet loaned paintings by Johnson and Burns, as well as photographs of Gordon at Gyllene Cirkeln, a popular jazz club in Stockholm. Importantly, the photographs were taken by Leif Wigh in 1964; later, he would join the Moderna Museet staff as curator of the medium.

    SEE ALSO: London’s National Gallery Presents a History of Violence as Painted By Caravaggio

    Challenges to compiling the checklist arose when a significant repository of works by Johnson had a loan moratorium in place. Still, Leslie contacted the curator responsible for the collection and advocated for the loans as a contribution to scholarship. Leslie worked with Jeffrey Lee of RYAN LEE Gallery to identify and track down important works by Gentry in private collections. To complement these earlier works with one from his later career, when Gentry had divided his time between New York and a studio in Malmö, she requested Illumination from the Studio Museum in Harlem. Only months before the exhibition opened, she located a collage titled Cymbals by Sam Middleton, who spent a brief but formative period in Sweden during which he wrote a treatise on collage. Gallerist Gavin Spanierman gladly lent it.

    Paintings in various styles hanging on a red wallPaintings in various styles hanging on a red wall
    Curator Leslie Anderson searched Nordic and American public and private collections for works of art that could tell this story. Jim Bennett of Photo Bakery for the National Nordic Museum

    We also discussed objects that the National Nordic Museum could acquire to represent the story of African Americans in the Nordics in perpetuity. Jazz records of music released by Gordon and Duke Jordan, a cryptic self-portrait by Jackson, as well as issues of Ebony Magazine featuring famed singer Anne Wiggins Brown in Norway, dancer Doug Crutchfield in Denmark and Sweden, and US Ambassador to Denmark Terence Todman. When an iconic stretched textile by Howard Smith was unavailable for display, a fellow curator advised them to set an eBay alert, and voilà, Blue Irises entered the Museum’s collection. After the exhibition’s opening, Ronald and Edith Burns donated the Surrealist-inspired Paper Doll Costumes (1966) to the Museum, contributing to a total of nine acquisitions.

    One of the most exciting moments in the exhibition’s development was the discovery that artist and designer Howard Smith’s son Josef lived near the Museum. It was serendipity. A teacher in a Seattle school, he was participating in an outreach program offered by Museum staff, and he introduced himself. He generously shared his story with the Museum’s oral history specialist and established a connection to the artist’s studio collection. We borrowed several works from Josef and Smith’s widow Erna. Smith traveled to Finland in 1962 with Young America Presents—a program backed by the CIA to challenge perceptions of race relations abroad—and then spent much of his professional life in Finland, finding an environment favorable to artistic expression, which is where the corpus of his work remains.

    Nordic Utopia? African Americans in the 20th Century brings together works from sixteen Nordic and American collections—many for the first time—to draw transmedial connections and represent a cultural efflorescence. In terms of both lenders and budget size, it is the largest exhibition organized by the Museum. After Seattle, Nordic Utopia?” will travel to two additional venues: the Chazen Museum of Art and Scandinavia House, after which, the loans will disperse, with select paintings and works on paper committed to exciting projects that further amplify the work of the protagonists of this unique story.

    Nordic Utopia? African Americans in the 20th Century” is on view at the National Nordic Museum in Seattle through July 21.

    How a First-of-Its-Kind Exhibition About African American Artists in the Nordic Countries Came to Be

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    Ethelene Whitmire and Leslie Anderson

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  • The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

    The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

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    An installation view of ‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism’ at the Met. Courtesy The Met, Photo by Anna-Marie Kellen

    Among New York neighborhoods, Harlem has long stood out for its immense impact on culture. Early in the Twentieth Century, it emerged as an epicenter of music, art, theater, literature and dining—the result of the mass exodus of millions of Black Americans from diverse backgrounds who left the rural south to settle in the urban north. More than 175,000 people came to Harlem, including artists, writers, musicians and great thinkers who would pave the way for the Harlem Renaissance’s most recognizable names: W.E.B. Du Bois, Josephine Baker, Augusta Savage, Cab Calloway and many more.

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s recently opened show, “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism,” pays tribute to it all with an exhibition featuring over 160 artworks by Black artists from the 1920s through the 1940s, in what is the first survey of the subject in the city since 1987.

    The exhibition is divided into sections that highlight everything from activism to nightlife, featuring what the Met calls “the first African American-led movement of international modern art,” and showcasing the work of artists like Charles Alston, Aaron Douglas, Meta Warrick Fuller, William H. Johnson, Archibald Motley, Winold Reiss, Augusta Savage, James Van Der Zee and Laura Wheeler Waring. Also shown are portrayals of African diasporan subjects as rendered by Matisse, Munch, Picasso and a handful of others.

    SEE ALSO: Robert Alice Is Behind the First Collection of Generative Art NFTs at Christie’s

    The start of “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” recognizes writer and philosophy professor Alain Leroy Locke, whose 1925 book of cultural criticism, The New Negro, set forth principles of “a new vision of opportunity” for African Americans and helped shape the Harlem Renaissance and, with it, American culture as a whole. There’s a portrait of the writer by Winold Reiss, alongside a copy of his book, which includes the essay ‘The Legacy of the Ancestral Arts,” that invited black artists to embrace African aesthetics. There are also portraits of thinkers like Zora Neale Hurston, presented in a portrait by Aaron Douglas.

    A painting of people eating outdoors under umbrellasA painting of people eating outdoors under umbrellas
    Archibald J. Motley, Jr., ‘The Picnic,’ 1936, Oil on canvas. Juan Trujillo / HowardUniversityGalleryofArt,Washington,D.C.

    The section titled “Everyday Life in the New Black Cities” is full of stunning paintings, including Hale Woodruff’s 1930 The Card Players, depicting a cubist-inspired scene of pool players in a dark bar and Pool Parlor, a 1942 painting by Jacob Lawerence—the first example of the artist’s work to be included in the Met’s permanent collection.

    Overall, the exhibition is wide-ranging and thoughtful in both its curation and presentation. Photo highlights include the James Van Der Zee photo Couple, Harlem, from 1932, with its stylish couple in fur coats posing with their Cadillac on a street lined with brownstone buildings.

    A black and white vintage photo of two people in fur coats posing next to a 1930s style carA black and white vintage photo of two people in fur coats posing next to a 1930s style car
    James Van Der Zee, ‘Couple, Harlem,’ 1932, printed later, Gelatin silver print. James Van Der Zee Archive, The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Gift of Donna Van Der Zee, 2021

    Women are highlighted throughout the show, which is refreshing. In a section devoted to “Portraiture and the Modern Black Subject,” a 1943 portrait by William H. Johnson called Woman in Blue depicts a woman staring confidently into the painter’s gaze—it looks as if she’s wearing a uniform, signaling the strength of the working woman. There are pieces by women artists, including Laura Wheeler Waring’s Yellow Roses on view, and plenty of representation: a photo of acclaimed singer Josephine Baker taken in 1925 by Adolph de Meyer shows her in all her glamorous glory.

    A major highlight of the exhibit is the room of paintings by Aaron Douglas, who created monochromatic, graphic images of silhouettes of African Americans throughout history real and imagined. Some of the most exciting sections are the galleries devoted to the Black nightlife that came to define Harlem and the “Artist as Activist” section, which explores the civic activism at the core of the Harlem Renaissance. William H. Johnson’s Moon Over Harlem, which depicts police brutality after a race-related riot in August of 1943, is particularly moving.

    A stylized collage of people on a street under an orange moonA stylized collage of people on a street under an orange moon
    William Henry Johnson, ‘Moon over Harlem,’ 1944, Oil on plywood. Smithsonian American Art Museum

    The exhibition ends with a tribute to Harlem: the 15-foot-long 1970 mural The Block by artist Romare Bearden. It depicts a block of mid-century buildings in the NYC neighborhood, including the block where Bearden, a member of the Harlem Artists Guide, had his art studio on 125th Street. He worked in the same building as artist Jacob Lawrence and poet Claude McKay, and his depiction takes the viewer back to old New York, capturing its bustling essence in a lively street that continues to be a hub of African American cultural life.

    A Harlem Renaissance exhibition at the Met was arguably long overdue, but don’t let that stop you from checking it out now. One show can’t cover the wide breadth of a decades-long art movement but “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” does much to capture its impact and legacy. It’s a strong introduction to what should be a lifelong journey into the lives of these influential artists and luminaries.

    A museum exhibition dominated by painted portraitsA museum exhibition dominated by painted portraits
    Portraits are a major focus of ‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism.’ Courtesy The Met, Photo by Anna-Marie Kellen

    The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” is on view through July 28.

    The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

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    Nadja Sayej

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