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Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941
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Page 1: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Jacob Lawrence[1917 – 2000]

The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941

Page 2: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Jacob Lawrence is regarded as one of the

masters of African-American art.

Page 3: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 4: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 5: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

• When his parents separated, Lawrence and his siblings moved with their mother first to Pennsylvania and eventually to Harlem.

• To keep her young son busy, Rose Lawrence enrolled young Jacob in art classes, where he showed early promise.

Page 6: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Jacob Lawrence age 6

Page 7: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Both she and the artist’s father had

“come up”—a phrase used to indicate one of the most important events in African American history since Reconstruction:

• The migration of African Americans out of the rural South.

Page 8: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• This exodus was gathering strength at the time of World War I, and fundamentally altered the ethnic mix of New York City and great industrial centers such as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh.

Page 9: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• In the late 1930s, the American artist Jacob Lawrence began producing extended narratives composed of multiple small paintings that were based on history or biography.

Page 10: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 11: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence started "The Migration of the Negro" -- that's the complete original title of his series -- in 1940, when he was 22.

• He was born in New Jersey to parents who'd recently left the South, had grown up in Pennsylvania and had lived in Harlem since his early teens.

Page 12: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 13: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• He settled with his mother and two siblings in Harlem at age thirteen.

• Harlem in the 1920s was rich in talent and creativity, and young Jacob, encouraged by well-known painter Charles Alston and sculptor Augusta Savage, dared to hope he could earn his living as an artist.

Page 14: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• One of his first mentors was African-American sculptor Augusta Savage, who continued to guide his career in later years.

Page 15: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Augusta Savage, born Augusta Christine Fells (February 29, 1892 – March 26, 1962) was an African-American sculptor associated with the Harlem Renaissance.

• She was also a teacher and her studio was important to the careers of a rising generation of artists who would become nationally known.

• She worked for equal rights for African Americans in the arts.

Page 16: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• She was born in Green Cove Springs, Florida. • She began making clay figures as a child, mostly

small animals, but her father would beat her when he found her sculptures.

• This was because at that time, he believed her sculpture to be a sinful practice, based upon his interpretation of the "graven images" portion of the Bible.

• After the family moved to West Palm Beach, she sculpted a Virgin Mary figure, and, upon seeing it, her father changed his mind, regretting his past actions.

• The principal of her new school recognized and encouraged her talent, and paid her one dollar a day to teach modeling during her senior year.

• This began a life-long commitment to teaching as well as to art.

Page 17: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Augusta Savage

Page 18: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• “She [Augusta] was the first person to give me the idea of being an artist as a job,” Lawrence later recounted.

• “I always wanted to be an artist, but assumed I’d have to work in a laundry or something of that nature.”

Page 19: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence’s greatest inspiration came from the people and places of his Harlem neighborhood.  Everything was open to his paintbrush—families, architecture, landmarks, even Harlem’s famous brownstones.

• He was one of the artists who was a part of the Harlem Renaissance.

Page 20: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Although younger than most of the artists, Lawrence had a unique painting style and was determined to use his paintings as positive depictions of black life in America.

• To further excel at his craft, Lawrence attended New York’s American Artists School from 1937 to 1939.

Page 21: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence noted that the 1930s in Harlem "was actually a wonderful period . . .although we didn't know this at the time. Of course it wasn't wonderful for our parents. For them, it was a struggle, but for the younger people coming along like myself, there was a real vitality in the community."

Page 22: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Just before World War II, Lawrence married fellow painter Gwendolyn Knight, also a student of Augusta Savage.

• Knight would be his partner for decades to come.

• The couple remained married until Lawrence’s death.

Page 23: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 24: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence was deeply confident in his identity as a black man, having been raised around other blacks who constantly affirmed his identity.

• Yet Lawrence also knew that other blacks were suffering from the ravages of discrimination and racism.

• He also was schooled in the history of Africans in America. Determined to meld his painting with his social awareness, Lawrence painted several series of works with different historical themes.

Page 25: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• When he won a grant to paint the "Migration" pictures, Lawrence hadn't had much formal training and was barely launched on his career, though he'd been in contact with some of the artistic leaders of the Harlem Renaissance.

Page 26: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 27: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The subject of the migration occurred to him in the mid-1930s.

• To prepare, Lawrence recalled anecdotes told by family and friends and spent months at the Harlem branch of the New York Public Library researching historical events.

Page 28: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 29: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The 60 hardboard panels of "Migration," only 12 by 18 inches each, walk us through the flight of African Americans from the rural South around the time of World War I.

Page 30: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence frequently called his style “dynamic cubism.”

• The dynamism is present in his use of vibrant colors and designs that resemble African-American quilts and textiles found in Africa.

• The cubism is present in the flat, often angled layers of the subjects in his work.

Page 31: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• “In order to add something to their lives, [black families] decorated their tenements and their homes in all of these colors..... It's only in retrospect that I realized I was surrounded by art.

• You'd walk Seventh Avenue and took in the windows and you'd see all these colors in the depths of the depression. All these colors.”  

Page 32: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence used the same palate of colors throughout the whole series.

• He did not mix colors.

• By using these colors, it unifies not only the pictures, but also their theme.

Page 33: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 34: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• He was the first visual artist to engage this important topic, and he envisioned his work in a form unique to him:

• A painted and written narrative in the spirit of the West African griot—a professional poet renowned as a repository of tradition and history.

Page 35: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 58

Page 36: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The Migration Series was painted in tempera paint on small boards (here, twelve by eighteen inches) prepared with a shiny white glue base called gesso that emerges on the surface as tiny, textured dots.

Page 37: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 38: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• By far the most famous of these is The Migration Series (1941), a sequence of 60 paintings depicting the mass movement of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North between World War I and World War II—a development that had previously received little or no widespread attention.

Page 39: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 40: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Before he began painting, Lawrence spent months researching the subject and distilling it into short captions and preparatory drawings.

• Then, with the help of his wife, the artist Gwendolyn Knight, he prepared 60 boards for the paintings.

Page 41: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 42: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• He created the paintings in tempera, a type of water-base paint that dries rapidly. To keep the colors consistent, he applied one hue at a time to every painting where it was to appear, a feat of organization that required him to plan all 60 paintings in detail.

Page 43: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 24

Page 44: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence, intent on constructing a seamless narrative, chose to work with a single hue at a time on all sixty panels.

• He used drawings only as a guide, painted with colors straight from the jar, and enlivened his compositions with vigorous brushstrokes that help further the movement of the story.

Page 45: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 46: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The captions placed below each image are composed in a matter-of-fact tone;

• They were written first and are an integral part of the work, not simply an explanation of the image.

Page 47: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence often described the migration as “people on the move,” and his series begins and ends with crowds of people at a train station (a potent symbol for growth and change in American history);

Page 48: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• In the first panel, people stream away from the viewer through gates labeled “Chicago,” “New York,” and “St. Louis”;

Page 49: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 1

Page 50: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• In the last one, they face us, still and

silent, behind an empty track.

• The caption, which states, “And the migrants kept coming,” renders the message sent by the painting ambiguous and evocative.

• Are the migrants leaving us, or have they just arrived?

• What is our relationship to them?

Page 51: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 60

Page 52: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 59

Page 53: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence also asks those questions of the laundress, who appears toward the end of the series.

• Her monumental, semipyramidal form, anchored between the brown vat containing a swirling pattern of orange, green, yellow, and black items and the overlapping rectangles of her completed work, is thrust toward us by her brilliant white smock.

Page 54: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Jacob Lawrence did not need to look far to find a heroic African American woman for this image of a solitary black laundress:

• His mother had spent long hours cleaning homes to support her children.

Page 55: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 57

Page 56: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• With head bent in physical and mental concentration, she wields an orange dolly, or washing stick, in a precise vertical:

• A powerful stabilizing force in the painting, and a visual metaphor for her strength and determination.

Page 57: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 58: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence showed The Migration Series in Harlem before being invited to bring it to a downtown setting that had previously displayed only the work of white artists.

Page 59: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The exhibition received rave reviews and Lawrence’s acceptance by the art world and the public was confirmed when twenty-six of the panels were reproduced in Fortune magazine.

Page 60: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• After they were published in part in Fortune magazine, the series was the subject of a solo show at the Downtown Gallery in Manhattan in 1941, making Lawrence the first black artist represented by a New York gallery.

• Interest in the series was intense.

Page 61: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence had intended the series to remain intact, but agreed to divide it between two museums,

• The even numbers going to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and the odd numbers to the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C

Page 62: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 63: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• The crucial thing about Lawrence's "Migration" is how it is so completely centered on its subject matter.

• The series was made in the great age of modernist style, whose consuming interest was in how a picture looked.

• Yet Lawrence's art is consumed with the story it wants to tell.

Page 64: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 5

Page 65: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 10

Page 66: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• We see Southern troubles: the boll weevil that destroyed the cotton crop, the lynchings, the unfair courts and oppressive labor practices, the poverty.

Page 67: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 68: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• We see the moment of migration:

• The black newspapers and Northern labor scouts encouraging migrants to move;

• The efforts of the Southern establishment to keep them from leaving;

• The crowded trains that carry them away.

Page 69: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 49

Page 70: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 20

Page 71: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• And we see the benefits and trials of their new Northern homes:

• Jobs and better food and less overt persecution;

• Ghettos and race riots and attacks on black buildings.

Page 72: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 73: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• It's clear that Lawrence's commitment to communicating these facts, as powerfully as possible, is greater than his interest in pretty-picture making.

Page 74: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence doesn't simply ignore the radical changes that had hit painting over the previous four decades.

• He couldn't work in any of the old realist techniques, because those were too closely tied with the bad old days they were born in.

Page 75: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• To be of their time, and to look forward with some semblance of hope, Lawrence's "Migration" paintings had to work in a timely, modern style that was widely seen as speaking to the future.

Page 76: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• But somehow, as a black man treating the outsider status of his race, his use of that vanguard style also had to register some opposition to it, as the product of “oppressive white society.”

Page 77: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• That opposition is especially clear in the casual crafting of the "Migration" series.

• Almost all of Lawrence's forms and figures are stylized, as modern art demanded.

• But rather than sleek outlines and geometric elegance, they have sloppy contours and crude shapes.

Page 78: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• His broad areas of color have gaps and hesitations, as though filled in with magic markers by a slightly lazy kid.

• Lawrence avoids the fine surface polish often sought in the fine arts and goes instead for striking pictorial effects achieved with minimum labor.

Page 79: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• It's as though he recognizes a fully modern style as the only language he can credibly speak in but wants to insist that it's the message, rather than the language, that really matters to him.

Page 80: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• By making his images unsatisfactory, in terms of the highest standards of refined modern art, Lawrence says he's got different aims than such pioneers as Pablo Picasso and Fernand Léger, or American followers such as Stuart Davis and Charles Sheeler.

Page 81: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• There's never anything high-flown or needlessly complex in Lawrence's "Migration of the Negro,"

• No allegory or coy symbolism or arcane references.

• It's meant to have the storytelling power of a Passion cycle on the walls of a medieval church.

Page 82: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Instead, storytelling images work because of the effort it takes to decipher them -- to match them to the stories that you know, or to contemplate what unknown stories they might illustrate.

• And they work because that effort gets you looking that much closer and thinking that much harder about the situations depicted in them.

Page 83: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence's series, with its charged issues, appropriately demands a bit more effort even than usual.

• What precisely is the subject of the almost-abstract picture in Panel No. 7, captioned "The Negro, who had been part of the soil for many years, was now going into and living a new life in the urban centers"? (At least, that's its original caption. In the 1990s, Lawrence provided updated captions for most of the series.)

Page 84: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 7

Page 85: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 10

Page 86: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Or how about Panel 19, captioned "There had always been discrimination"?

• It takes a minute to make out the double drinking fountains, with a white woman at one and a black mother and daughter at the other.

Page 87: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 88: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 17

Page 89: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 18

Page 90: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 30

Page 91: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 21 The Seamstress

Page 92: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 21 The Barber Shop

Page 93: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 39

Page 94: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Panel no. 53

Page 95: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence retains just enough of modernism's disjunctions -- of the broken spaces and forms of cubism and futurism -- to stand for the painfully fractured world he's depicting, and to concentrate our minds on it. But there's never so much modernism that its style distracts from his subject.

Page 96: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence retired in 1986 as a professor art at University of Washington in Seattle.

• He received more than two dozen honorary degrees in his lifetime and several awards for his artwork and community service, including the Springarn Medal in 1971—the highest award given by the N.A.A.C.P.

Page 97: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 98: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

• Lawrence died in his sleep June 9, 2000.

• His work continues to stand as an artistic triumph among American artists.

Page 99: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.
Page 100: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Essay Question 1

• Lawrence painted all the panels for The Migration Series at the same time, one color at a time.

• How did this affect the way the series looks?

Page 101: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Essay Question 2

• Why were African Americans leaving the South?

• What were they seeking?

• What type of jobs were many migrants hoping to find in the North?

Page 102: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Essay Question 3

• How did Lawrence learned about scenes from the migration?

Page 103: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Essay Question 4

• What was significant about Lawrence being asked to exhibit his art in a downtown gallery?

Page 104: Jacob Lawrence [1917 – 2000] The Migration Series, No 57 c. 1940 - 1941.

Essay Question 5

• Why was Lawrence like a West African griot?

(A griot is a professional poet who perpetuates history and genealogy through tales and music.)