The Black American artist Jacob Lawrence was born in Atlantic City, USA on the 7th September 1917. He was one of the most important American black artists of the 20th century, widely renowned for his modernist depictions of everyday life as well as epic paintings of African American history and historical figures. Born into a poor family his rise to artistic prominence was rapid. He was part of the Harlem Renaissance which was an intellectual revival of African American art and literature centred in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City around the 1920’s and 30’s. He had his first art exhibition at 18 and by 1941 New York’s Downtown gallery was exhibiting his paintings. He was one of the first black artists to be represented by a major gallery.
He tended to work by creating a series of paintings on a theme; his most important series are the Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, the black revolutionary general and founder of the Republic of Haiti. The Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman Series that explored the anti-slavery movement, and his most famous being, The Migration Series, inspired by the African-American Great Migration, the movement of 6 million black Americans out of the rural Southern United States to the industrial cities in the North and Midwest that occurred between 1916 and 1970’s. By 1949 Lawrence was the most prominent black artist in America.
Jacob Lawrence also taught with his wife Gwendolyn Knight at the Black Mountain College in 1946 and was offered a professorship teaching art at the University of Washington, Seattle in 1971.
In 1990 Jacob Lawrence received the National Medal of Arts from President George H.W. Bush.
Jacob Lawrence is celebrated not only for his artistic achievements and the dramatic impact he had on succeeding generations of artists. But also, for several firsts, being one of the first Black American artists to achieve widespread, mainstream acclaim, and the first to be represented by a commercial gallery, the Downtown Gallery in New York. Jacob Lawrence was one of the few painters of his generation who grew up in a black community, to be taught primarily by black artists, and to be influenced by black people.
Please consider subscribing to this channel: ru-vid.com...
And supporting this channel on Patreon, / paulpriestleyart many thanks!
0:00 Introduction
1:08 Harlem. New York 1930's
1:31 Utopia Children's House, Harlem 1930's
1:43 Harlem Art Workshop. 1930's
3:29 Lafayette Theatre, Harlem late 1930's
6:16 A Former Site of the Downtown Gallery c.1940's
6:53 John Brown's Fort, Harpers Ferry
7:08 US Coastguard, Florida
7:49 Black Mountain College, North Carolina
9:03 New York, c.1950
9:14 Hillside Hospital, New York
9:20 The Hospital Series 1949-50
10:02 The Struggle Series - The History of American People 1954-55
10:29 United Nations Building, New York, c.1960
10:42 Brooklyn Museum, New York, 1960
11:18 New York, 1960's
11:39 Nigeria, 1960's
13:00 Whitney Museum of Art, 1974
13:48 Kingdome Stadium, Seattle, 1979
13:57 Howard University, Washington DC
Interested in DRAWING? Check out my drawing channel: / paulpriestleyart
Would you like me to critique your drawing? Sign up here:-
https:patreon.com/paulpriestleyart
Want this video in your own language? Check out my video to see how: • How to Change Subtitle...
For drawing and painting art tutorials designed for beginners - visit my website: - paulpriestleyart.com
Follow our Facebook Page: / paulpriestleyartvideos
Follow our Twitter page:
/ priestleyonart
PATREON: I'd like to thank the following patrons whose support in the making of this video is much appreciated: Danny Wilshaw, Dee Ann Havely, Deirdre Feely, Denise Berg, Ivan Gilbert Rappaport, Mary Stewart, Nicolae Opris, S. Ryckman, Tatiana Lostorto, Tess N, Tina Valentine, Visnja Zeljeznjak, Linda Frazier, Marnie Coutts, Stein Harald Os, Emily Liss, William Scott Griffiths, Dinny Hinds, Patrick Lefebvre, Jennifer Lansdowne, Philip Levene, Alena Sidorkina, Jeff Smith, Jodi Clark, James Webster, Ashok Kanagasundram, John Sullivan, Olivia McGoldrick, Rahman Yii, Sarah Hirsch, and Susan Valliant
29 июн 2024