Teacher PK
Teacher PK
Teacher PK
Thanks for contributions supporting publication of this packet to: Lynn Russell, chair,
division of education; Chris Vogel, production manager, publications department;
Donna Mann, senior publications manager, education division; Phyllis Hecht, web manager;
and staff of the exhibition programs and photography departments. The education
division extends special appreciation to Mary Lee Corlett, research associate, and
Ruth Fine, curator of the exhibition, for their help in realizing this project.
Every effort has been made to locate copyright holders for the materials used in this book. Any
omissions will be corrected in subsequent printings.
Cover: Tomorrow I May Be Far Away, 1966/1967, collage of various papers with charcoal and
graphite on canvas, 46 x 56 in. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Paul Mellon Fund
Title page: Thank you...For F.U.M.L. (Funking Up My Life) detail, 1978, collage of various papers with
ink and graphite on fiberboard, 15 x 18 3/8, Donald Byrd
Back cover: The Street, 1964, collage of various papers on cardboard, 9 5/8 x 11 3/8 in. Milwaukee
Art Museum, gift of Friends of Art and the African American Art Acquisition Fund
The Art of Romare Bearden
A Resource for Teachers
Objectives
The materials in this packet will help students learn the following about
Romare Bearden:
40 Music
Music as Subject
Music and Aesthetic Choices Opposite: Romare Bearden,
Music and Life Canal Street, New York, 1976.
Estate of Romare Bearden,
courtesy of the Romare Bearden
Activities:
Foundation, New York, photo:
Draw to Music Blaine Waller, copy photograph
Compare Poetry and Music by Beckett Logan
Bearden at a Glance
8 Bearden at a Glance
I think the artist has to be some- Meet Romare Bearden. He was 5 feet
11 inches tall and heavyset. His
thing like a whale, swimming friends called him Romie. After
graduating from college, he had a
with his mouth wide open, career as a social worker while
becoming one of the preeminent
absorbing everything until he has artists in the United States from the
mid 1960s until his death in 1988.
what he really needs. When he
Previous page and opposite: Bearden and his
cat Gypo, mid-1970s. Estate of Romare
finds that, he can start to make Bearden, courtesy of the Romare Bearden
Foundation, New York. Both photos:
limitations. And then he Nancy Crampton
B E A R D E N AT A G L A N C E
Jazz and the blues provided Bearden
with many subjects. He grew up hear-
ing rural blues and uptown jazz: Duke
Ellingtons orchestra, Earl Hines
piano, Ella Fitzgeralds scat singing.
For sixteen years, his studio was
above the Apollo Theatre, still a
Harlem musical landmark.
Of the Blues: Mecklenburg Co., Saturday Night Pittsburgh (detail), 1965, collage of various
(detail), 1974, collage of various papers with papers with ink on cardboard, 6 1/4 x 8 3/4 in.
paint, ink, graphite, and surface abrasion Harry Henderson
on fiberboard, 50 1/2 x 44 1/4 in. Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Houchens
Harlem, New York City, center of St. Martin, the Caribbean island
black culture, where he moved where, as a mature artist, he
as a toddler. lived and worked part of the year.
Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Midtown Sunset Romare Bearden Foundation, New York,
(detail), 1981, collage of various papers with photo: Frank Stewart
paint and bleached areas on fiberboard,
14 x 22 in. Private collection
Be on the lookout 11
for these:
B E A R D E N AT A G L A N C E
Trains
Spirit Figures (Conjurers)
Rural shacks
Row houses and stoops
Large hands
Birds
Musicians
Windows
Beardens Techniques Hills
African sculpture
Watercolor Smokestacks
Gouache Sun and Moon
Collage Cats
Collage, photostatically enlarged in black and white Roosters
Edition Prints
Monotypes
Oils
And One Sculpture!
From far off some people that Born in Charlotte, North Carolina, the seat of Mecklenburg County, on
September 2, 1911, Romare Bearden grew up in a middle-class
I have seen and remembered African-American family. His parents Bessye and Howard were
both college-educated, and it was expected that Romare would
have come into the landscape. achieve success in life. About 1914, his family joined the Great
Migration of southern blacks to points north and west. In the
Sometimes the mind relives early twentieth century, jim crow laws kept many blacks from vot-
ing and from equal access to jobs, education, health care, busi-
things very clearly for us. Often ness, land, and more. Like many southern black families, the
Beardens settled in the Harlem section of New York City. Romare
you have no choice in dealing would call New York home for the rest of his life.
with this kind of sensation, things In the 1920s, Harlem was a rich and vibrant center of cultural and intel-
lectual growth and the focal point of African-American culture.
are just there. There are roads Romares mother was the New York editor of the Chicago Defender,
a widely read African-American weekly newspaper, and became a
out of the secret places within prominent social and political figure in Harlem. Duke Ellington,
Langston Hughes, and other well-known artists, writers, and
us along which we all must move musicians were frequent visitors to the Bearden family home.
Such social and intellectual gatherings would become a mainstay
as we go to touch others. in Romares life. Also, his encounters with these legendary talents
must have fostered his lifelong interest in jazz and literature.
BIOGRAPHY
Pittsburgh Memories, Farewell
Eugene, 1978, collage of
various papers with paint, ink,
graphite, and bleached areas
on fiberboard, 16 1/4 x 20 1/2 in.
Laura Grosch and Herb Jackson
Another early source of inspiration for the artist was his encounter with
the sculptor Augusta Savage, with whom he spent time as a teen-
ager. In Beardens words, she was a flesh and blood artist with a
studio which we were welcome to use as a workshop, or even just
to hang out in. She was open, free, resisted the usual conventions
of the time, and lived for her art, thinking of success only in terms
of how well her sculptures turned out.
Beardens early images, made in the late 1940s, present subjects from
his wide-ranging interest in literature and religion. He treated the
Passion of Christ, Federico Garca Lorcas poem Lament for a Bull-
fighter, Franois Rabelais social satire Gargantua and Pantagruel,
and Homers epics. Stylistically, these works are abstract and figural,
gestural and brightly colored. The images are recognizable but
fractured, rotated, and boldly outlined.
From 1942 to 1945 Bearden served in the United States Army. In 1950,
supported by the GI Bill, he traveled to Paris and studied at the
Sorbonne. He also visited Italy and Spain. Throughout his career
as an artist, Bearden would seek inspiration from and intellectual
engagement with the masters, past and present, of European art.
Duccio, Giotto, Picasso, and Matisse are among the artists he
studied and admired. Other important artistic sources included
African art, Chinese landscapes, and the work of his contempo-
raries in the United States and Mexico. Bearden was constantly
processing new sources of informationart, books, and life
which in turn enriched his work.
When Bearden returned from Europe to New York, his art career stalled,
and he became a successful professional songwriter for a few years.
In 1954 he married Nanette Rohan, a dancer and choreographer
born on Staten Island in New York, with family origins in the Caribbean
island of St. Martin. Friends had been pressing Bearden to return
more fully to art, and eventually he did, dedicating himself to the
systematic study of the old masters for three years.
BIOGRAPHY
Beardens early collages were composed primarily of magazine and news-
paper cuttings. Along with his Projections, which were enlarged
photostatic copies of these collages, they mark a turning point
in his career and received critical praise. In style and technique
Beardens work was never staticit was always evolving. Over
the next thirty years, Beardens collages employed not only flat
areas of color defined by cut papers, and patterned or textured
areas created by cuttings of preprinted images and hand-painted
papers, but also foils and fabrics. Surface manipulation was another
ongoing concern for the artist, who explored new ways to rework
his paper and painted surfaces, including the use of bleach or
peroxide, sandpaper, and perhaps even an electric eraser.
Although Bearden is best known for his work in collage, which is also
the focus of this text, he achieved success in a wide array of media
and techniques, including watercolor, gouache, oil, drawing, Bearden at work. Estate of Romare
monotype, and edition prints. He also made designs for record Bearden, courtesy of the Romare Bearden
albums, costumes and stage sets, book illustration, and one Foundation, New York
Hand-painted paper
19
BIOGRAPHY
The train, one of several journeying things, recurs
in Beardens worka memory from the artists youth in
rural North Carolina and a symbol of the Underground
Railroad and the northern migration of African
Americans from the South during the early part of the
twentieth century.
slide 3
Tomorrow I May Be Far Away, 1966/1967, collage of various papers
with charcoal and graphite on canvas, 46 x 56 in. National Gallery of Art,
Washington, Paul Mellon Fund
20 Activity: Scrutinize a Bearden Collage
transparency 1 or slide 3
What is the first thing that catches your eye, and why?
Describe the setting. The three people are probably on a farm. How can
you tell that they are in the country and not the city?
Imagine what the man in the center is thinking. What do you think happened
right before he sat down? What do you think will happen next?
How would you describe the mood of this collage (quiet, still, thoughtful,
expectant)?
If you could ask the artist one question about this work, what would it be?
Activity: Write a Poem Inspired by Collage 21
transparency 2 or slide 1
BIOGRAPHY
In Profile/Part I, The Twenties: Pittsburgh Memories, Farewell Eugene,
Bearden remembers the passing of a childhood friend. He also
wrote a poem in memory of young Eugene. Compare Beardens
collage to the poem, especially visual imagery and mood.
Ask students to write a poem of their own, inspired by one of the repro-
ductions from this packet. Students should consider the pictures
subject and think about ways to make connections to the visual
imagery with words.
transparency 2 or slide 1
Profile/Part I, The Twenties: Pittsburgh
Farewell to Eugene
Memories, Farewell Eugene
Why do you leave me
and for that broken bone
in your soul, so now
the oscillating beacon of
memory that sweeps a sea of time
is blurred by fog
and I see only those buds
which follow you, but
when I try to reach them,
they disappear in the silence.
Nothing like this was necessary
Eugene
I stand here among these tombs,
Holding this flower
Which will fall endlessly into this
open earth
that rejects nothing.
I forbid you to completely leave me
even if I must journey
through the mist of years
to where breakers fall on unknown
shores.
I will do so, again and
again, Eugene
Until I find you and ask
Why you had to leave.
Memories
24 Memories
North Carolina
I never left Charlotte except physically.
slide 4 Beardens images abound with affection for his birthplace in the South.
Charlotte, North Carolina, was a hub for railroadsthe Piedmont
Watching the Good Trains Go By, 1964,
collage of various papers with ink on and Northern, and the Southern Railway lines ran through the
cardboard, 13 3/4 x 16 7/8 in. The Collection city. Train tracks were only a few blocks from the houses of the
of Philip J. and Suzanne Schiller, American Bearden family. Beyond was countryside, cotton and farm fields.
Social Commentary Art 19301970
Church-going, quilting, and other community activities were
Previous page: detail of photograph on etched permanently in Beardens recollections from summer visits.
page 28 Among his vivid memories:
MEMORIES
slide 5
Madeline Jones Wonderful Garden, 1977, collage of various
papers with ink, graphite, and surface abrasion on fiberboard,
13 1/2 x 16 in. Frederick L. Brown
Sometimes I remember my
grandfathers house
A garden with tiger lilies,
my grandmother
Waving a white apron to
passing trains
On that trestle across the
clay road.
For Bearden, trains were weighted symbols. They signified the black
migration North after slavery. They clocked time as they rolled and
whistled by on their various scheduled routes. They hauled materials
from the steel yard. They provided blacks with jobs.
slide 6
Prevalence of Ritual: Conjur Woman, 1964,
collage of various papers with foil, ink, and
graphite on cardboard, 9 3/8 x 7 1/4 in.
Anonymous lender
26
Romare Bearden, first
page, The Negro in
Little Steel Opportunity:
Journal of Negro Life 15
(Dec. 1937): 362. Romare
Bearden Foundation,
New York. Permission of
National Urban League
Pittsburgh
Many blacks migrated from the South for industrial jobs in northern cities
such as Pittsburgh, and Beardens grandparents rented rooms to
them. This collage recalls the essence of life in their boardinghouse.
At left, a mill worker leaves for his shift, lunch bucket (made of
crumpled foil) in hand.
Inside, front and center, is a warmly lit room, where Bearden
remembered his grandmother rubbing new boarders with cocoa
butter. They didnt realize, when they first started, the terrific heat
from those furnaces....the flames would lick out and scorch
them. The life was hard, but the workers were making a tremen-
slide 7
dous wage....
Pittsburgh Memories, 1984, collage of
Around the house are signs of steel scaffolding, a pulley, smoke-
various papers with fabric, foil, paint, ink,
color pencil, graphite, and bleached areas stacks, belching steam and fire.
on fiberboard, 28 5/8 x 23 1/2 in. Carnegie
Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; gift of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald R. Davenport and Mr. and Mrs.
Milton A. Washington, 1984
27
MEMORIES
Harlem tenement houses,
1943. Library of Congress
Harlem
It wasnt New York City, the place alone, that shaped Bearden as an artist,
but the combination of that extraordinary metropolis with Beardens
intellect and energy. Harlem was the center of black intellectual
life in the United States, and Bearden became a fixture among its
well-known intellectuals, artists, and musicians. Harlems famous
jazz and blues clubs were nearby, including the Apollo Theatre
above which Bearden had a studio for sixteen years. The every-
days and nights of Harlem, noteworthy as well as mundane, were
Bearden subjects. He saw the parallels between the South and
Harlem, where similar rituals and habits prevailed.
A voracious reader, Bearden tapped into the mythic and biblical asso-
ciations of his experiences, presenting black life in a universal Mother and Child, c. 1972, collage of various
context. Mother and child, a sacred bond in all races and times, papers with ink and graphite on fiberboard,
express the Christian model of Mary with baby Jesus. 13 3/4 x 11 7/8 in. Peg Alston
The Block II (detail), 1972, collage of various papers with foil, paint, ink, graphite, and
surface abrasion on seventeen fiberboard and plywood panels including two applied in relief
and one recessed, 25 1/2 x 74 in. The Walter O. Evans Collection of African American Art
Americans in Paris at the
28 Caf de Flore (with Bearden
wearing hat). Romare
Bearden Foundation, New
York, photo: Morgan and
Marvin Smith
Paris
The Caribbean
In 1973 Bearden and his wife Nanette built a house on the Caribbean
island of St. Martin, Antilles, Nanettes ancestral home. The house
sat near a mountain. Bearden described it as a 2,500 foot green
fountain of splashing, cascading elephant ears, wild orchids, avo-
cados, and bamboo canesrising out of the sea.
MEMORIES
Obeah in a Trance, 1984, watercolor and
gouache on paper, 29 5/8 x 19 5/16 in.
Estate of Romare Bearden, courtesy of the
Romare Bearden Foundation, New York
slide 9
In a Green Shade (Hommage [sic] to Marvell), 1984, collage of various papers with paint, ink, and
graphite on fiberboard, 39 1/4 x 30 1/4 in. Yvonne and Richard McCracken
In this intimate view of an island pool, intense hues of water, sky, and foliage are lit by the sun,
a russet globe in the right sky. A broad shimmer on the water illuminates a figure in silhouette
bending down to bathe.
30 Activity: Make a Collage
slide 3, transparency 1, and reproduction;
slide 10
MEMORIES
Step 3- Work on your collage with the goal of combining both the
specific (you) and general (your culture).
_____ imagine
_____ personalize
_____ capture slide 10
_____ integrate The Street
_____ transform
_____ release
_____ symbolize
_____ recall
_____ inform
Its not easy to accomplish all of the above, but thats what Bearden did, and
its why his collages combine visual, emotional, and cultural memory.
Now that you have created a collage, do you agree with the quote above?
A Leader in the Arts Community
34 A Leader in the Arts Community
In 1963 Bearden and fellow artist Hale Woodruff invited other artists,
later calling themselves the Spiral group, to meet at Beardens
downtown Canal Street studio to discuss political events related
to the civil rights movement and the plight of blacks in America.
Initially the group was concerned with logistical issues, such as
obtaining busses to travel to the March on Washington in the summer
of 1963. However, their efforts turned toward aesthetic concerns,
rather than political. Spiral member Norman Lewis framed the
Invitation for the first Spiral exhibition. question: Is there a Negro Image? To which group member
Romare Bearden Foundation, New York Felrath Hines responded, There is no Negro Image in the twentieth
centuryin the 1960s. There are only prevailing ideas that influence
Woodruff suggested Spiral as a name for the
group, alluding to the Archimedean Spiral, everyone all over the world, to which the Negro has been, and is,
which moves outward and constantly contributing. Each person paints out of the life he lives. Spiral
upward. Spirals First Group Showing was sought to define how it could contribute to the civil rights movement
subtitled Works in Black and White. Bearden
had suggested the exhibitions black-and-
and to what author Ralph Ellison called a new visual order.
white theme because it comprised both
socio-political and formal concerns.
35
The Street, 1964, photostat on fiberboard, Edition 1/6, 31 x 40 in. Estate of Romare
Bearden, courtesy of the Romare Bearden Foundation, New York
36
To extend the activity, take photographs of the art, write captions for
each piece, and create a scrapbook or catalogue for the students
to enjoy long after the exhibition has been taken down.
38 Activity: Whats Your Cause?
Bearden was committed through writing and art to elevate the status of
black artists to a position equal to that of white artists. Discuss with
students issues of concern in the world today. Ask each student to
choose one issue and create a collage using magazine and news-
paper cuttings that will raise awareness of the problem or suggest
solutions. Display student work around the classroom. Discuss with
students how art can play a role in improving societys problems.
Pick an issue and have them design a plan of action. Will they:
create art
write reviews
donate to an institution
volunteer?
Now make a very light copy of the image. Color it using your own
palette. How does your work differ from the original? (Consider
mood, emphasis, shifts in meaning.)
Music
42 Music
Previous page and opposite: This undated How could it be otherwise? When he was a boy, Beardens family apartment
photograph was among Beardens papers.
Estate of Romare Bearden, courtesy of the
was just across the street from the stage door of the Lafayette.
Romare Bearden Foundation, New York Duke Ellington, Fats Waller, Ella Fitzgeraldthey were all guests
in the Bearden home. He lived only blocks from the Savoy Ballroom
and for sixteen years worked in a studio above the fabled Apollo
Theatre. Bearden saw jazz as a metaphor for the energy of life.
Watery forms at the bottom and a leafy branch at the right suggest that
these men and women are gathered to celebrate and sing praise at
a river baptism. Their strong silhouettes, stark against a red back-
ground, open mouths, and emphatic gestures suggest the ecstat-
ic responses of an amen corner, its shouts and moans rising in coun-
terpoint to the phrasing of the preachers words.
MUSIC
slide 12
Of the Blues: At the Savoy, 1974, collage
of various papers with paint, ink and
graphite on fiberboard, 48 x 36 in. From
the Collection of Raymond J. McGuire
For nearly a quarter-century after it first opened in 1926, the Savoy Ballroom
was one of the most important venues in jazz, a place where
innovation happened. Drummer Chick Webb opened there with
his orchestra in 1931. Performing with singer Ella Fitzgerald, Webbs
band had audiences stomping. Dancers filled the 200-foot dance
floor. Two bandstands kept the music playing continuously, till the
wee hours. Bearden recalled the time: Everything you did was, you
might say, geared to the groove.
Listen to: Chick Webb and his Orchestra, Stompin at the Savoy and
Slappin Seventh Avenue (with the Sole of My Shoes) on the
Romare Bearden Revealed CD
44
slide 3
Tomorrow I May Be Far Away, 1966/1967,
collage of various papers with charcoal and
graphite on canvas, 46 x 56 in. National
Gallery of Art, Washington, Paul Mellon Fund
Bearden took the title for this collage from a blues song, Good Chib
Blues, first recorded in 1929.
The shingled buildings and waiting black men come from Beardens
memories of North Carolinablues singers and bottleneck guitars,
farm hands, watermelon, and the ubiquitous sound of a train in
the distance, taking African Americans north.
Listen to: Edith Johnson, Good Chib Blues and Autumn Lamp on
the Romare Bearden Revealed CD
45
MUSIC
Music and Aesthetic Choices
Does the connection between Beardens work and music go beyond
subject?
There are parallels between the way jazz and blues musicians make
their art and the way Bearden approached his (call and response,
improvisation).
Do the sounds of jazz or the blues even influence the way Beardens
paintings look?
Bearden himself often used musical analogies to describe his work and
pointed to the improvisation that is inherent in collage:
The more I played around with visual notions as if I were improvising like
a jazz musician, the more I realized what I wanted to do as a painter,
and how I wanted to do it.
Once you get going, all sorts of things open up. Sometimes something just
seems to fall into place, like piano keys that every now and again just
seem to be right where your fingers come down.
I am nonetheless thinking about how things are going together and have a
feeling about how the work is going to go.
MUSIC
slide 14
Prevalence of Ritual: Baptism (detail), 1964,
collage of various papers with paint, ink,
and graphite on cardboard, 9 1/8 x 12 in.
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Smithsonian Institution, gift of Joseph H.
Hirshhorn, 1966. Below: details
Visual equivalences?
English critic and essayist Walter Pater once wrote that all art con- One of the things I did was
stantly aspires to the condition of music. Not all would agree,
and some would reject the idea of any correspondence at all. listen to a lot of music. Id take
Bearden did not paint with sound, of course, but he, more than
most artists, seems to have sensed a real connection between a sheet of paper and just make
music and the formal properties of his art.
lines while I listened to records
The slipped (often flatted) notes of blues and jazz, the blue notes, pro-
duce an effect like the offset planes of Beardens collaged faces. a kind of shorthand to pick up
They are naturalistic in their parts, photographically so even, but
abstract in the whole. Stepped, constructed, faceted, with fea- the rhythm and the intervals.
tures tumbling like rapid notes. Like music itself, Beardens faces
are part expectation and part surprise.
Stuart Davis, Swing Landscape, 1938, oil on Before devoting himself fully to painting in 1955, Bearden received
canvas, Bloomington, Indiana University of Art
encouragement and advice from post-cubist artist Stuart Davis.
Davis, who formed his own jazz ensemble, urged Bearden to
study jazz for visual analogies.
MUSIC
The voids and spacing of shapes changed in Beardens worksfor good
after 1955. Compare the round undulating forms of Now the
Dove (1946), which was inspired by Lorcas poem Lament for a
Bullfighter, to the more upright and energetic rhythms of City
Lights (1970).
Hines piano style broke away from the stride progression of early jazz
with strong octaves (or tenths) that emphasized the pulse. Pauses
between notes are as expressive as the notes themselves. Hines
played with trumpet-great Louis Armstrong, and his piano is some-
times called trumpet style. Compare this recording by Hines and
Armstrong with James P. Johnsons Carolina Shout. slide 15
City Lights, c. 1970, collage of various
papers with ink, graphite, and surface
abrasion on fiberboard, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 in.
Beverly Zimmerman Private Collection in
memory of Phil Weinberg
slide 2
Now the Dove and the Leopard Wrestle,
1946, oil on canvas, 23 1/2 x 29 1/4 in.
Clements Library, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor
50
A trip through the jazz bins in a record store will reveal yet another connec-
tion between Bearden and the music of jazzhe designed a number
of covers for albums and CDs, including one for Wynton Marsalis.
Listen to: Albert King, Thats What the Blues Is All About
MUSIC
Draw to Music
Have students draw freehand while listening to different jazz recordings,
as Bearden did. Compare students work, looking for similarities
in rhythm, etc., that might reflect the influence of the music.
Suggested Listening:
J Mood or Laughin and Talkin (with Higg) on the Romare
Bearden Revealed CD (jazz)
Autumn Lamp on the Romare Bearden Revealed CD (blues)
MUSIC
Dream Boogie Lenox Avenue: Midnight Notes on recordings
Good morning, daddy! The rhythm of life (Many of these selections can be heard
online through various websites. See the
Aint you heard Is a Jazz rhythm, Resource Finder at the end of this packet.)
The boogie-woogie rumble Honey.
Of a dream deferred? The gods are laughing at us. Branford Marsalis Quartet
Romare Bearden Revealed
2003 Marsalis Music/Rounder Records
Listen closely: The broken heart of love, 11661-3306-2
Youll hear their feet The weary, weary heart of pain, Included in this packet
Beating out and beating out a Overtones,
James P. Johnson
Undertones,
Available on several Smithsonian Folkways
You think To the rumble of street cars, recordings.
Its a happy beat? To the swish of rain.
Chick Webb
The original recording of Stompin at the
Listen to it closely: Lenox Avenue, Savoy (1921) was on Vocalion Records. It is
Aint you heard Honey. available on various compilations, including
Something underneath Midnight, Biograph BCD 105.
like a And the gods are laughing at us.
Edith Johnson
On Rosetta LP 1308. Available on CD:
What did I say? all poems Langston Hughes
Agram Blues AB 2016. Recorded in 1929
Estate of Langston Hughes
with Roosevelt Sykes on piano. The lyrics
contain veiled sexual references. The chib
Sure,
of the title is a weapon, similar to a shiv.
Im happy!
Take it away! Trixie Smith
On the LP Out Came the Blues (Coral CP
58) 1970. Originally recorded in 1938 with
Hey, pop! Sidney Bechet on clarinet.
Re-bob!
Mop! Earl Hines with Louis Armstrong
Okeh 4145H
Available on various compilations including
Y-e-a-h! Smithsonian Folkways recordings.
Wynton Marsalis
J Mood
Sony/Columbia 1988
Albert King
Recorded originally with Little Milton
(Stax SCD-41232-2); also available on later
recordings and compilations.
Artistic and Literary Sources
56 Artistic and Literary Sources
African design.
slide 16 and
transparency 3
Odysseus: Odysseus Enters at the Door
Disguised as an Old Man, c. 1977,
watercolor, gouache, and ink over carbon-
paper line on paper, 12 3/4 x 15 5/8 in.
Evelyn N. Boulware
You can see the almost one-to-one correspondence between these images.
Observe the details Bearden borrows from Pintoricchios painting:
Now, look closer. Notice the ways Bearden makes these elements from
Pintoricchios work suit his own ideas about space, color, and
composition. Henri Matisse, Woman Seated in an Armchair,
1940, oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art,
Analyze Space. Washington, Given in loving memory of her
husband, Taft Schreiber, by Rita Schreiber
Pintoricchios interior space seems to have depth, as if you could step in.
Beardens space is tilted up and flattened by the repeated, high-keyed
color pattern of his floor tiles. We are stopped at the picture plane.
Compare the suitors and the figures of Penelope and her servant.
Pintoricchios figures occupy space; they are modeled and three-
dimensional.
Beardens friezelike figures have profile faces, frontal eyes, and emphatic
hand gestures resembling figures in ancient Egyptian art.
slide 14 and Here, a baptism, the Christian rite of purification and initiation, is being
transparency 4 performed. It is a river baptism such as Bearden witnessed in the
Prevalence of Ritual: Baptism, 1964, collage of South. At centerhis body constructed of brown-toned paper,
various papers with paint, ink, and graphite his face partially covered by an African maskis the one being
on cardboard, 9 1/8 x 12 in. Hirshhorn
baptized. On his left stands the preacher, one arm raised to anoint
Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian
Institution, gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn, 1966 him. His rectangular profile is pasted over another face, and his dress
combines fragments of a preachers white collar and cuffs and a
businessmans pinstriped suit. Helping support the initiate on
the other side is a profile figure with exaggerated, carved features
especially his nose and mouth.
Below, immersed to the chest in water, are two figures whose faces have
the incised or slit eyes reminiscent of some African sculpture. Parts
of these faces are actually formed by picture fragments of masks.
Their hands are enlarged and expressive. A female figure, right,
wears a white headscarf. Figures, left, wear draped robes. At bottom
are collaged rectangles that suggest the river, and behind, at left,
Beardens photostat of African masks. are classic details of the rural South Bearden knewcotton field,
Romare Bearden Foundation, New York train on the move, and country church.
Bearden admired the formal beauty and stylized forms of African masks 59
and statuary. His felt strongly connected to African art, especially
Though not necessarily the precise works Bearden saw, these compara-
tive illustrations typify the African art to which Bearden had access.
You can easily identify these African sculptural elements in
Beardens collage.
1- The central figure wears a Kwele mask from Gabon or Congo.
2- Linear markings on the raised hand of the right figure in the stream 3 4
and on the heads of the two figures at left recall ritual scarification,
From upper left: 1. Kwele face mask, wood,
seen in the sculpture of an Ife king figure reproduced here. Gabon or Congo, 19th20th century,
3- The eyes and nose of the left foreground figure are from an African Metropolitan Museum of Art, Michael C.
mask of a water spirita perfect reference to baptisms use of water Rockefeller Memorial Collection, bequest of
Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1979, photo 1993
for purification.
Metropolitan Museum of Art. 2. Portrait of
4- Who could miss the exaggerated features of the center-right figure? It an Oni (King) (detail), bronze, Ife culture,
might be part of a Nimba mask from Guinea, which exported Nigeria, late 15th/early 17th century,
many similar examples. Museum of Ife Antiquities, Nigeria, photo:
Werner Forman Archive/Art Resource, NY.
3. Otobo mask of a water spirit, wood,
Now compare Baptisms central figure with the cubist painting by Pablo Kalabrari Ijo, Nigeria, Collection Raymond
Picasso, Les Demoiselles dAvignon. Picassos work was a shocking Wielgus. 4. Nimba shoulder mask (detail),
wood, Baga tribe, Guinea, Rietberg
break from the European art worlds norm for representing the
Museum, Zurich, photo: Wettstein & Kauf
human figure. The African art Picasso saw in Paris was decisive in
the contrived, planar bodies, and masklike faces he gave his
demoiselles. Bearden knew Picassos work, which filtered African
art through a Western sensibility.
As we discovered, the faces of many of Beardens faithfuldeacons, Master of the Life of Saint John the Baptist,
initiates, church members on the shoreare composed from The Baptism of Christ, probably 1330/1340,
fragments of African masks. We saw faces and hands that brought tempera on panel, National Gallery of Art,
Washington, Samuel H. Kress Collection
to mind the scarification rituals of several African cultures. Bearden
admired the formal beauty and stylized form of these African
elements. He also understood their role in African rituals and rites
of passage. It is surely no accident that Bearden selected a water
spirit mask for this baptism scene.
Your turn! Try matching works by Bearden to art that inspired him.
Photocopy and distribute to students the Handout of Comments.
Then project Transparency 5 and have students work together to
match Beardens works on the left with their sources on the right.
Matches:
5. Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Childrens Games (detail), 1560, oil on oak-
wood, Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum. Photo: Erich Lessing/Art
Resource, NY
Romare Bearden, Profile/Part I, The Twenties: Mecklenburg County,
Holiness Church Revival, 1978, collage of various papers with paint,
ink, graphite, and bleached areas on fiberboard. Dr. David H. Moore
Activity: Match Beardens Work with Artistic Models 63
transparency 5
In the late 1950s Bearden studied Chinese art with a scholar. Elements of
Chinese landscapean open, entry space for the eye, geographic
features equally sized, whether near or far, and contrasting shapes
and voidsbecame fundamental to Beardens concepts about
composition.
Bearden strove to paint the life of my people as I know it...as Bruegel painted
the life of the Flemish people of his day.
METHOD
Bearden was always concerned with the underlying geometry of his slide 17
compositions. In 1968 he described his collage practice: I first Spring Way, 1964, collage of various papers
put down several rectangles of color some of whichare in the on cardboard, 6 5/8 x 9 3/8 in. Smithsonian
American Art Museum, Bequest of Henry
same ratio asthe rectangle that Im working on. [Then] I paste a
Ward Ranger through the National
photograph, say, anything just to get me started, maybe a head, at Academy of Design
certaina fewplaces in the canvasI try to move up and across
the canvas, always moving up and across. If I tear anything, I tear
it up and across. What I am trying to do then is establish a vertical
and horizontal control of the canvas. I dont like to get into too
many slanting movements.
68
slide 18
The Blues, 1975, collage of various papers
with paint, ink, and graphite on fiberboard,
24 x 18 in. Honolulu Academy of Arts/gift of
Geraldine P. Clark, 1977 (4451.1). Above:
detail of singers hand
69
METHOD
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, some of
Beardens collages became more painterly.
The ratio of painted surface is equal to or
greater than the collaged areas. An example
of this late painterly style is Profile/Part II,
The Thirties: Midtown Sunset. Here the two
techniquescollage and paintingseem
perfectly balanced. It is difficult to distin-
guish the collaged areas from the painted
ones. Overall there is fluidity and luminosity
that produce a glow from within. Bearden
described the scene as my last view of day-
light as I entered the subway on my way
home from N.Y.U.
Midtown Sunset is one of nineteen collages from the Profile/Part II: slide 19
The Thirties series, which focuses primarily on Beardens life in Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Midtown Sunset,
Harlem. In this view of New York City, Beardens underlying geometry 1981, collage of various papers with paint
and bleached areas on fiberboard, 14 x 22 in.
is apparent. The picture plane is divided into two rectangles: on the
Private collection
left the sun is just beginning to set, and on the right the moon has
risen. Beardens recurring sun/moon motif gives us a sense of time
elapsing (and collapsing). The space is shallow, with building stacked
upon building. The arcs and spire of the Chrysler Building are seen
in the upper left corner. Patterns of short brushstrokes and bleached
areas suggest the window-filled walls of skyscrapers. The bleached
areas lend a luminous effect. Amidst the painted buildings, Bearden
has used cut-paper ones to fill in this cityscape.
On the right side, patterns of horizontal and vertical lines extend the
cut-paper cityscape to the top edge of the work. The ubiquitous
symbol of a train creates a strong horizontal. In the bottom right
corner a rectangle of blurred black, blue, green, and yellow perhaps
suggests the passing of the subway, the rush of the crowd, the
citys eternal movement.
70
METHOD
Monotypes
From 1973 to 1984 Bearden worked in the print medi-
um of monotype. In this technique, an image is
painted or drawn on metal or plastic. (Bearden
used a plastic sheet.) The image is transferred
to paper (printed), either with a printing press
or hand-pressure. The resulting print is unique,
although subsequent ghost prints, with less
intense results, can be pulled from the origi-
nal plate. As he did in his collages, Bearden
often enhanced the print surface with graphite,
watercolor, gouache, or acrylic paint.
For more information on the monotype process, visit the website of the
Smithsonian American Art Museum at
http://americanart.si.edu/collections/exhibits/monotypes/index.html
CODA
What I saw was black life presented on its own terms, on a grand and epic
scale, with all its richness and fullness, in a language that was vibrant
and which, made attendant to everyday life, ennobled it, affirmed its
value, and exalted its presence.
Playwright August Wilson about Bearden
Please note:
Wilsons play contains some adult language and subject matter.
74 Slide List
SLIDE LIST
11. Of the Blues: Carolina Shout, 1974, collage of various papers with
paint and surface abrasion on fiberboard, 37 1/2 x 51 in. Mint
Museum of Art, Charlotte, North Carolina, Museum Purchase:
National Endowment for the Arts Matching Fund and the Charlotte
Debutante Club Fund
12. Of the Blues: At the Savoy, 1974, collage of various papers with paint,
ink, and graphite on fiberboard, 48 x 36 in. From the Collection of
Raymond J. McGuire
13. Train Whistle Blues: II, 1964, collage of various papers with paint and
graphite on cardboard, 11 x 143/8 in. Robert and Faye Davidson, Los
Angeles, California
14. Prevalence of Ritual: Baptism, 1964, collage of various papers with
paint, ink, and graphite on cardboard, 9 1/8 x 12 in. Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, gift of
Joseph H. Hirshhorn, 1966
15. City Lights, c. 1970, collage of various papers with ink, graphite, and
surface abrasion on fiberboard, 131/2 x 101/2 in. Beverly Zimmerman
Private Collection, in memory of Phil Weinberg
16. Odysseus: Odysseus Enters at the Door Disguised as an Old Man,
c. 1977, watercolor, gouache, and ink over carbon-paper line on
paper, 12 3/4 x 15 5/8 in. Evelyn N. Boulware
17. Spring Way, 1964, collage of various papers on cardboard, 65/8 x 93/8 in.
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Bequest of Henry Ward
Ranger through the National Academy of Design
18. The Blues, 1975, collage of various papers with paint, ink, and graphite
on fiberboard, 24 x 18 in. Honolulu Academy of Arts, gift of
Geraldine P. Clark, 1977 (4451.1)
19. Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Midtown Sunset, 1981, collage of various
papers with paint and bleached areas on fiberboard, 14 x 22 in.
Private collection
20.Rain ForestPool, c. 1978, oil monotype with paint on paper,
23 3/4 x 17 5/8 in. Private collection, Cambridge, Massachusetts
76 List of Color Reproductions
Of the Blues: At the Savoy, 1974, collage of various papers with paint,
ink, and graphite on fiberboard, 48 x 36 in. From the Collection of
Raymond J. McGuire
Piano Lesson, 1983, collage of various papers with paint, ink, and
graphite on paper, 29 x 22 in. The Walter O. Evans Foundation for
Art and Literature
List of Transparencies 77
LISTS
All works by Romare Bearden are Romare Bearden Foundation/
Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
5. Ten images for use with Activity: Match Beardens Work with Artistic Models
78 Resource Finder
Fine, Ruth, et al. The Art of Romare Bearden. Exh. cat., National Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C., 2003.
Memory and Metaphor: The Art of Romare Bearden 19401987. Exh. cat.,
The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, 1991. Published by
Oxford University Press.
______. Romare Bearden: His Life and Art. New York: Abrams, 1990.
RESOURCE FINDER
For young people
Bearden, Romare. Lil Dan, the Drummer Boy: A Civil War Story. (book and
CD). New York: Simon and Schuster, 2003.
Hughes, Langston (with collage by Romare Bearden). The Block. New York:
Viking, 1995.
Online resources
www.beardenfoundation.org
Official web site of the Bearden Foundation
www.edsitement.neh.gov
Among extensive resources is a program Learning the Blues
www.pbs.org/riverofsong
Includes educational materials about the blues along the Mississippi River
www.pbs.org/jazz/
Extensive information about jazz from the Ken Burns television series
Includes biographies, audio, and online acitivites
www.iaje.org
Web site of the International Association for Jazz Education
www.artsedge.kennedy-center.org
An education resource for performance and visual arts
www.loc.gov
Memory, a section of the Library of Congress site, includes archived
recordings as well as other cultural documents
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