"Ironers," 1943. Gouache on
paper from a private collection.
Over the
Line:
WASHINGTON, D.C. - A major retrospective of works by Jacob
Lawrence is on view at The Phillips Collection through August 19.
Bringing together over 200 works spanning the breadth of his long
career, the exhibition is the most complete assessment ever of
Lawrence's artistic development and creative process and includes
works that have never been exhibited before. Organized by The
Phillips Collection, "Over the Line: " will later travel to the
Whitney Museum of American Art, the Detroit Institute of Fine
Arts, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Museum of
Fine Arts, Houston.
The exhibition was planned on the occasion of the publication of
The Complete Jacob Lawrence. This two-volume catalog
raisonne is the definitive publication on the work of Jacob
Lawrence and inspired the artist himself to invite The Phillips
Collection, a leading institution on Lawrence scholarship, to
organize this major retrospective. Through its exhaustive
research, the project located a number of significant works in
private collections, many of which will be exhibited for the
first time in this retrospective.
"Even though Jacob Lawrence painted from personal experience and
the experiences of those around him, his themes are universal,"
said Jay Gates, director of The Phillips Collection. "His stories
of struggle, discrimination, and the quest for freedom, justice,
and human dignity transcend racial lines and reveal truths that
resonate with us today."
"Guided by mentors in his Harlem community, Lawrence found his
own voice and vision in painting," added Elizabeth Hutton Turner,
senior curator at the Phillips and organizer of the exhibition.
"By presenting a broad overview of his life's work, in
combination with a close examination of his creative process,
this exhibition will allow us to see for the first time how the
radical means of his teachers enabled Lawrence to invent his own,
ultimately modern, pictorial language."
"Munich Olympic Games," 1971. Tempera and gouache on paper from
the collection of the Seattle Art Museum.
"Over the Line: " will underscore Lawrence's special relationship
to The Phillips Collection. His work has been represented in the
holdings of The Phillips Collection since 1941 (then the Phillips
Memorial Gallery), when Duncan Phillips purchased the 30
odd-numbered panels of Lawrence's 60-picture epic "Migration
Series" for the museum.
Following an exhibition of the work at Edith Halpert's Downtown
Gallery in New York, the first time an African American artist
was represented by a major commercial gallery, the series was
split by Phillips and the Museum of Modern Art. Phillips was
impressed by Lawrence's distinctive combination of abstraction
and socially relevant subject matter, and saw the significance of
incorporating Lawrence's vivid palette and patterns into his
ever-expanding definition of American modernism.
Despite the critical acclaim and popularity of his work, the
evolution of Lawrence's career has yet to be fully examined or
understood. "Over the Line: " will be the first exhibition to
examine the complex nature of his radical invention and to
present to a nationwide audience the dynamic evolution of his
style, technique, and methods. The exhibition will be organized
around themes such as "Interiors and Exteriors," "Performance and
Games," "Work and Workers," and "Struggle," to demonstrate the
artist's stylistic development and experimentation within his
treatment of the same theme over time.
Through the generosity of over 80 lenders, including
institutions, organizations, and over 40 individuals, many
paintings that have rarely, if ever, been on view are being made
available for this exhibition. For example, his 1936 drawings
executed while he was in the Civilian Conservation Corps and
works completed in the last years of his life, including new
treatments of the "Games" theme, are being exhibited for the
first time in a major exhibition.
In addition, the exhibition will address questions regarding
Lawrence's creative process by presenting the results of a recent
conservation study of his materials and techniques. Extended wall
labels and case materials will consider Lawrence's exclusive use
of water-based paints and primary use of underdrawings as
critical components of his working process.
For over 60 years, Jacob Lawrence addressed, in stark images and
bold colors, many of the social and philosophical concerns of the
Twentieth Century, especially as they pertain to the lives and
histories of African Americans, including migration, manual
labor, war, family values, and education.
Lawrence was born in Atlantic City, N.J., in 1917. Moving from
there to Easton, Penn., and finally to Harlem in 1930, his family
was part of the Great Migration of African Americans who
relocated to the North from the South. Raised among the "New
Negroes," the emerging African American writers, artists, and
poets who were a manifestation of the Harlem Renaissance,
Lawrence was one of the first artists trained in and by the
African American community in Harlem. At Utopia Children's House,
a community daycare center where his mother sent him after school
while she worked, Lawrence received his earliest art instruction
from Charles Alston, then a graduate student at Columbia
University Teachers College.
Alston, using theories from Arthur Wesley Dow's textbook
Composition, taught Lawrence how to take charge of the
picture plane, to invent his own pictorial language based on
personal decisions about composition and how to use space.
Lawrence continued to study with Alston throughout the 1930s at
the WPA Harlem Art Workshop and at Alston's studio at 306 West
141st Street. During this time he encountered notable artists,
writers, and activists, such as Alain Locke, Addison Bates,
Langston Hughes, Ralph Ellison, William Aaron Douglas, Orson
Welles, and Augusta Savage, who had a profound affect on his
development as an artist.
The people, sounds, movement, and color of the Harlem community
were an unlimited source of inspiration for Lawrence. He refereed
to his mother's efforts to create a beautiful home for her family
despite the financial stress of the depression: "Our homes were
very decorative, full of pattern, like inexpensive throw rugs,
all around the house. It must have had some influence, all this
color and everything... I used to do bright patterns after these
throw rugs; I got ideas from them, the arabesques, the movement
and so on." Influenced by the geometric shapes that surrounded
him, Lawrence used bold colors and repeating patterns to
illustrate stories about African American people and their lives.
Early recognition of Lawrence came in February of 1938, with a
solo exhibition of his work at the 135th Street YMCA. Inspired by
the expressive power of abstraction while also sensitive to the
struggle and hardships of the people in his community, Lawrence
began to define a new brand of modernism, distilling subject
matter based on the experience of life around him into bold
colors and elemental shapes. Lawrence also painted what he
learned from Harlem storytellers, and by the age of 21 had
chronicled the lives of Toussaint L'Ouverture, Frederick
Douglass, and Harriet Tubman.
Three years later, Lawrence burst onto the national scene with
"The Migration of the Negro." This powerful narrative of the
black migration unfurls over multiple panels to betray the
struggle, strength, and perseverance of African Americans in
search of a better life in the North. Although its exhibition at
the Downtown Gallery enabled him to cross racial barriers, it
would also mark the beginning for Lawrence of a constant identity
struggle, as he reconciled his experiences as an African American
with his widespread acceptance by the predominantly white art
community.
By the 1950s, the pervasiveness of New York abstraction, civil
rights era agitation, temporary confinement in a psychiatric
hospital, and his continuing artistic development combined to
take Lawrence's figurative and narrative style to a greater
psychological depth. A more complex layering of patterns and
heightened use of shadow and light reveal a stylistic departure
from his early work, introducing issues of identity through the
use of mask as metaphor.
The 1952 publication of Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man" reminded
contemporary audiences of how inherent the notions of visibility
and invisibility were for many African Americans in the 1950s.
Like Ellison, Lawrence was struggling with this question and
examined it in a series of semi-abstract works depicting African
American entertainers. In the well-known painting "Vaudeville"
(1951), two African American comedians, frowning and set against
an abstract backdrop of colorful, intricate patterning, face off
against one another in an unsettling image that turns this world
of slapstick humor into an examination of how the public
perceived these African American entertainers.
When the early 1960s saw civil rights agitation reach its height,
Lawrence continued as before to respond in his art to the
experiences of contemporary African Americans. For Lawrence, the
theme of social protest was inescapable. News photographs and
images of segregated lunchroom sit-ins and the journeys of the
Freedom Riders triggered paintings like "Praying Ministers"
(1962), which depicts African American and white ministers and
rabbis bending their heads in prayer while students protest
around them, and the dramatic scenes of conflict in "Two Rebels"
(1963) and "American Revolution" (1962).
Although his work became less explicitly grounded in contemporary
events, from the 1970s on Lawrence never swayed from his
commitment to the African American experience. As he continued to
experiment with composition and space, Lawrence bridged the gap
between form and content to create a pictorial language that is
truly modern. He continued his radical experimentation with
abstraction and representation until his death, at the age of 82,
on June 9, 2000.
Today, the work of Jacob Lawrence can be found in almost 200
museum collections, including The Phillips Collection, the Art
Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery of Art, and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, and has been the subject of three
retrospective exhibitions.
"Harriet Tubman Series, Panel No. 4," 1939-40. Casein tempera
on hardboard from the collection of the Hampton University
Museum.
Like Harriet Tubman, whom he portrayed crossing the
American-Canadian border in his painting "Over the Line" (1967),
Lawrence himself was able to cross borders time and again. He
built pathways as he traversed between his commitment to telling
the African American story and presenting it in the highly
segregated art world, which fervently received it. Referring also
in a concrete sense to Lawrence's technique, in which he first
created an underdrawing and covered up the lines as he painted,
the title, "Over the Line," acknowledges this artistic and social
climate and Lawrence's efforts to transcend racial barriers and
find common ground among all Americans despite their differences.
Republished with added exhibition-specific material, the critical
monograph Over the Line: , from The Complete Jacob
Lawrence, will serve as the exhibition catalogue. A curator's
statement, letter from director, lender's list, and an
illustrated checklist will add to essays by eight leading
scholars to explore the full range of Lawrence's development in
light of critical issues within artistic, social, and political
contexts. Published by The Phillips Collection in association
with the Jacob Lawrence Catalog Raisonne Project and the
University of Washington Press, this full-color publication will
be available at The Phillips Museum Shop for $40.
The Phillips Collection, founded in 1921, is America's first
museum of modern art and its sources. Its permanent collection
contains nearly 2,400 works by impressionist and Twentieth
Century modern artists, including European artists such as
Renoir, Bonnard, Matisse, Monet, Degas, Cézanne, Picasso, Braque,
and Klee, and American masters such as O'Keeffe, Lawrence, Dove,
Avery, Diebenkorn, and Rothko. Housed in the unique setting of
the founder's 1897 Georgian Revival home, The Phillips Collection
exhibits some of the world's finest paintings of the late
Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.
The museum is at 1600 21st Street, N.Y., at Massachusetts
Avenue, in the historic Dupont Circle neighborhood. Hours are
Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 am to 5 pm; Thursdays until
8:30 pm; Sunday, from noon to 5 pm. For information, 202-387-2151
or visit www.phillipscollection.org.