A History of African American Artists from 1792 to the Present.Reviewed by Barbara Chase-Ribound Paris A History of African Artists from 1792 to the Present is a landmark work, lavishly illustrated and definitive in its treatment. While giving a conspectus con·spec·tus n. pl. con·spec·tus·es 1. A general survey of a subject. 2. A synopsis. [Latin, from past participle of c of more than fifty signal African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. artists born before 1925, it treats the relation of their work to the prevailing artistic, social, and political atmosphere both in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. and abroad. This approach is extremely effective, for Black art, like any other, does not exist in a vacuum or even a ghetto. Beginning with a radical revaluation Revaluation A calculated adjustment to a country's official exchange rate relative to a chosen baseline. The baseline can be anything from wage rates to the price of gold to a foreign currency. In a fixed exchange rate regime, only a decision by a country's government (i.e. of Joshua Johnson Not to be confused with Joshua J. Johnson. Joshua Johnson (c.1763–1832) was the first African American painter to make his living by painting. Biography Johnston was apparently self trained in his art. , an eighteenth-century portrait painter, the book ends significantly with Alma W. Thomas, the most prominent and influential abstract expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres of the American school - the style that catapulted American art of the fifties and sixties into worldwide recognition as the major international school. Himself a significant twentieth-century American painter, Bearden is particularly sensitive to the myriad problems faced by any African American artist working in the United States under such devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. preconceptions, prejudices, and contempt that it is a miracle that any significant works survived at all. Especially cogent are Bearden's chapters on Edmonia Lewis and Henry Ossawa Tanner Henry Ossawa Tanner (June 21, 1859–May 25, 1937) was an African American artist who studied with Thomas Eakins and was the first African American painter to reach international acclaim. , both of whom faced at the turn of the century every question still confronting contemporary African American artists: What does race have to do with subject matter? What is "Negro" art? Should Black artists paint only Black subjects? Should one ignore radical prejudice in the United States and devote one's life to "Art"? Should the artist escape such a stifling atmosphere? What is "Art" for an African American in the light of the problems faced by his or her people? Do the aesthetic problems of artists who are considered "Black" by the predominant society differ from those of artists who are considered "white"? What connection do artists who are "Black" have to Egyptian, North African, or sub-Saharan tribal art in the light of the planetary history of art and civilization? Should race be an element of style - and why? Should this be the decision of the artist him- or herself, or of the society in which the artist works and in which there exists a dominant artistic judgment and measuring stick? How much can an artist preserve or use from an oppressive, dominant society? Bearden and Henderson offer no answers to these questions. Instead they recount each artist's personal history. Edmonia Lewis died in obscurity in Rome, never having resolved her relationship to the prevailing style, Neoclassicism neoclassicism: see classicism. , in the light of individual expression, and thus was left behind when Auguste Rodin led the Romantic art movement away from the sterility of Neoclassicism. Tanner lived most of his life in Paris, where his international success provided him with a unique situation of influence that he never asserted to any great degree. He was subsequently accused by the Black bourgeoisie of failing to establish a "Negro school" of art. But just what would a "Negro movement" of art have been? And Tanner was not even sure he wanted to be identified by "race." Tanner had horrible burdens and traumas that haunted him. One incident related in the Tanner chapter could have been and usually was repeated with variations in every other artist's biography (I am thinking now of Edmonia Lewis's brutal beating by townspeople in Oberlin). According to a fellow student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, Joseph Pennell, "at first Tanner was quiet and modest . . . unnoticed," but this attitude did not last. Titling his racist account "The Advent of the Nigger," Pennel wrote that he "could hardly explain" the change in attitude except that Tanner "seemed to want things" and "began to assert himself." Not only did Tanner draw, Pennell remarked, but he "also painted." That a Black person dared to paint was too much for Pennell and his racist friends: "One night his easel was carried out in the middle of Broad Street and though not painfully crucified he was firmly tied to it and left there." Many of the artists in Bearden and Henderson's history are the subjects of no monograph or detailed studies of their lives. For the first time this work puts their careers in historic, socio-economic, and intellectual perspective, an effort absolutely necessary to evaluate their artistic achievements or lack of them. For the barriers raised against the African American artist were monumental. Information or means of communication concerning their own historical and psychological situation was so lacking that these nineteenth- and twentieth-century artists were like blind men, each groping grope v. groped, grop·ing, gropes v.intr. 1. To reach about uncertainly; feel one's way: groped for the telephone. 2. in solitude for his or her voice, path, instruction, mentor, and accommodation to the prevailing culture and its demands. It was a culture that they should have been a part of. What is tragically striking in this study is the total absence of any reference to every single major international art movement from French Romanticism to Fauvism fauvism (fō`vĭzəm) [Fr. fauve=wild beast], name derisively hurled at and cheerfully adopted by a group of French painters, including Matisse, Rouault, Derain, Vlaminck, Friesz, Marquet, van Dongen, Braque, and Dufy. , to Impressionism impressionism, in painting impressionism, in painting, late-19th-century French school that was generally characterized by the attempt to depict transitory visual impressions, often painted directly from nature, and by the use of pure, broken color to , to German Expressionism, to Cubism cubism, art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907. Cubist Theory Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras. , Surrealism, and Italian Constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) . It is as if these early artists lived in a terrible vacuum, isolated, cut off from most world movements, with no points of reference, except perhaps the Mexican muralists. Tanner in the late 1890s rejected Impressionism for symbolic and religious painting. Palmer Hayden in the 1930s felt that African art, though "fine," had no relation to Black American artists. No one understood the importance of the African treatment of form and motif, its freedom from time and space and gravity and narrative; i.e., its quality as "pure" art in relationship to Klee, Picasso, Modigliani, and Brancusi, who had been desperately searching for this very freedom in order to move into the realm of "flat space," "pure form." It was as if, with Tanner's rejection of the modern movement, art by African Americans missed the train, not catching up until the late fifties and sixties. Edmonia Lewis, although she lived until at least 1911, remained mired mire n. 1. An area of wet, soggy, muddy ground; a bog. 2. Deep slimy soil or mud. 3. A disadvantageous or difficult condition or situation: the mire of poverty. v. in an anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism n. 1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order. 2. Neoclassic ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism n. A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially: a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form, style. As this book makes plain, Romare Bearden experienced the same solitude, isolation, and blind groping of these early artists. Not until Spiral was organized in the thirties in Harlem did individual African American artists come together as a group and a movement for mutual comfort, inspiration, and exchange of ideas. Yet in Europe this had been the normal life of an artist since the Renaissance: schools, masters, apprenticeships, manifestos, artistic circles, salons, and critical literature. Groups of poets, writers, collectors, patrons, and artists moved together in the same circles, mutually encouraging and inspiring each other, exchanging thoughts or having monstrous feuds and intellectual wars. Poets and writers wrote about art, artists illustrated contemporary works of literature, and patrons commissioned works of art, houses, monuments, and decorative art. But despite the brief flash of the Harlem Renaissance, Negro artists almost always have been misunderstood, mistreated, and held in contempt by both the Black and white communities - sometimes for the same reasons and sometimes for different ones. Only the most heroic character could survive such meprise, bad treatment, poverty, and disdain. Bearden and Henderson's A History of African American Artists from 1792 to the Present, a loving and impeccably researched tribute to African American artists, is timely, pertinent, and supremely relevant to the choices and the mental and moral development of today's artists. The questions of Afrocentric versus Eurocentric, mainstream or folklore, politics or pure art, recuperation recuperation /re·cu·per·a·tion/ (-koo?per-a´shun) recovery of health and strength. recuperation, n the process of recovering health, strength, and mental and emotional vigor. or avant garde - all still remain burning issues. |
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