Frist Center opens Aaron Douglas retrospective

On Friday, Jan. 18, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts will open Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist, the first nationally touring retrospective devoted to the foremost visual artist of the Harlem Renaissance.

Featuring nearly 90 paintings, murals, book and magazine illustrations by Aaron Douglas (1899–1979), this exhibition is especially significant for Nashville, where Douglas spent the last 30 years of his life as the founding chairman of the art department at historically black Fisk University. The celebrated Fisk Jubilee Singers will perform at 7 p.m. the night of the public opening. On view through April 13, the exhibition also features several works by Douglas’ contemporaries and students.

In conjunction with Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist, the Frist Center has organized Fisk University’s Art Faculty: The Legacy of Aaron Douglas on view Jan. 11, through May 11, in the Conte Community Artists Gallery. With works by current and former members of Fisk University’s art department, the exhibition focuses on Douglas’ impact on the local art community.

“The Frist Center is honored to bring this important exhibition to Nashville and to provide an opportunity to deepen our awareness and appreciation of one of America’s most important artists who lived in our own community,” says Frist Center executive director Susan H. Edwards, Ph.D. “We are particularly thrilled to have the Fisk Jubilee Singers perform here as a part of our opening weekend. This exhibition promises to be a broad celebration of Aaron Douglas, his legacy at Fisk and his role in modern American art.”

Throughout his career, Douglas projected a dignified voice of both opposition and aspiration through his powerful imagery. In a distinct style based on silhouetted figures and fractured space, he created images that evoke the harsh realities of African American life as well as hopes for a better future.

Frist Center Curator Katie Delmez notes, “Like other participants in the Harlem Renaissance and adherents to the notion of ‘the New Negro,’ Aaron Douglas wanted to embrace the culture and heritage—both good and bad—that are unique to African Americans. Douglas captured the spirit of the times when he wrote to his friend, poet Langston Hughes, ‘let’s sing it, dance it, write it, paint it.’”

A native of Topeka, Kansas, Aaron Douglas earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 1922. In 1925, he moved to Harlem to join the cultural flourishing that has been called the New Negro Movement or the Harlem Renaissance. The young artists, writers, dancers and musicians he met there believed creative expression could help define a unique racial identity and simultaneously bridge the divide between black and white communities.

Almost immediately after his arrival, Douglas became involved in Harlem’s thriving literary scene and was asked to contribute to various projects, including Alain Locke’s influential anthology The New Negro. He also created bold illustrations and cover designs for both Opportunity and Crisis, civil rights magazines published by the Urban League and the N.A.A.C.P., respectively.

Douglas collaborated with notable Harlem Renaissance writers including Langston Hughes, James Weldon Johnson and Claude McKay, to create book jacket designs as well. In 1926, with the Harlem Renaissance movement in full swing, Douglas, along with Wallace Thurman and Zora Neale Hurston, founded Fire!! A Quarterly Journal Devoted to the Younger Negro Artists.  

The highly regarded illustrator and painter was asked by Fisk University to create a series of murals to adorn the new Cravath Memorial Library (now Cravath Hall) in 1929. Five years later, Douglas was commissioned by the Works Project Administration (WPA) to paint murals for the 135th Street branch of New York’s Public Library. Entitled Aspects of Negro Life, the murals drew heavily on influences of African sculpture, music and dance.  

In 1937, Douglas returned to Fisk to teach art where he remained until his retirement in 1966. He died in Nashville in 1979.

During his long and illustrious career, Douglas vividly captured the spirit of his time and established a new black aesthetic and Utopian vision. Working from a politicized concept of personal identity, he combined cubist rhythms and Art-Deco dynamism with traditional African and African American imagery to develop a new visual vocabulary. Douglas’ imaginative and forceful ideas, and his distinctive artistic form, combined to produce the most powerful visual legacy of the Harlem Renaissance and made a lasting impact on the history of art and the cultural heritage of the nation.

The exhibition, on view in the Frist Center’s Upper-Level Galleries, begins with two galleries dedicated to the illustrations and cover designs that Douglas created for various literary publications. Highlights include the graphically incisive cover for Fire!! A Quarterly Journal Devoted to the Younger Negro Artists and the eight paintings he made to accompany James Weldon Johnson’s God’s Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse (1927).

The popularity of magazines and books and the ease of their dissemination made Douglas’ designs visible to a broad audience, both black and white. These creative partnerships between author and artist also underscore the multi-genre nature of the Harlem Renaissance.

A reading area, complete with samples of Harlem Renaissance music and publications and other reference books, is offered for visitors to learn more about this vibrant time period.

The next two galleries focus on Douglas’ large-scale murals, widely considered to be among his most important work, in which he portrayed subjects from African American history and contemporary life. In addition to the celebrated murals at Fisk University, Douglas was commissioned to create murals for such institutions as Club Ebony in Harlem (1927); the Sherman Hotel in Chicago (1930); the 135th Street branch of the New York Public Library (1934) and the Texas Centennial Exposition (1936). All of Douglas’ existing major mural projects are represented in this exhibition. Included are “portable” murals, studies for various projects and an artist-made video representing the permanently affixed Fisk and Harlem YMCA murals (1933).

The multiple styles explored by Douglas throughout his career are presented in the next segment of the exhibition. The various paintings and works on paper allow the visitor to compare and contrast the public style for which he is best known—flat, silhouetted figures, a limited color palette and radiating bands of light—with his more naturalistically rendered, private images of close friends and everyday life. The final section explores Douglas’ legacy and influence, with several works from contemporaries and students, including Romare Bearden, Bruce Nugent and Gregory Ridley.

Related Programs

Friday, January 18
Fisk Jubilee Singers
7 p.m.
Auditorium
Free

The Fisk Jubilee Singers, an historic, touring a cappella choral ensemble, will perform in the Frist Center Auditorium. Founded in 1871 by Fisk University professor of music George L. White, the ensemble has performed for dignitaries worldwide. The group was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2000 and is currently under the direction of Fisk alumnus Paul T. Kwami.

Friday, January 25            
ARTini
7 p.m.
Meet in Frist Center Grand Lobby
Included with gallery admission

Frist Center Curator of Interpretation Anne Taylor will talk about one or two works of art in the Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist exhibition. Complete your evening with music in the Grand Lobby, martinis at the cash bar and visiting with friends.

Saturdays in February (Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23)    
Frist Center Kids Club: Poem Prints
1 p.m.
Meet in the Upper-Level Foyer        
Ages: 5–10
Free: call 615.744.3357 to reserve a space

Saturdays in February, Kids Club members will create colorful prints inspired by writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Kids Club offers exciting opportunities for children to discover, explore and create art. Free membership includes a Kids Club card, art classes and additional rewards for participation.

Thursday, February 7        
Lecture: “Aaron Douglas and The Fisk Murals Restoration: A Masterpiece Revealed” 
6:30 p.m.
Auditorium
Free

Join Dr. Amy Kirschke, associate professor of art history at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, for an examination of the recent restoration of the Aaron Douglas murals at Fisk University.

Saturday, February 9        
Special Tour: Aaron Douglas Murals at Fisk University
2 p.m.                     
Meet at Fisk University’s Carl Van Vechten Gallery, 1000 17th Avenue North
Free, registration required. Call 615.744.3247 to reserve a space.

In conjunction with the Aaron Douglas exhibition, join Victor D. Simmons, director of the Fisk University Galleries, for a tour of the restored 1930 Aaron Douglas murals at Fisk University. Additional date: March 8.

Thursday, February 21            
Gallery Talk
7 p.m.
Meet in Frist Center Grand Lobby
Included with gallery admission

Join Frist Center Curator Katie Delmez for a tour of Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist. Complete your evening with music in the Grand Lobby, martinis at the cash bar and visiting with friends

Saturday, March 8            
Special Tour: Aaron Douglas Murals at Fisk University 
2 p.m.                     
Meet at Fisk University’s Carl Van Vechten Gallery, 1000 17th Avenue North
Free, registration required. Call 615.744.3247 to reserve a space.

In conjunction with the Aaron Douglas exhibition, join Victor D. Simmons, director of the Fisk University Galleries, for a tour of the restored 1930 Aaron Douglas murals at Fisk University.

Friday, March 14            
Films at the Frist: Brother to Brother
7 p.m.
Auditorium
Free

In conjunction with Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist, the Frist Center presents Brother to Brother, a film invoking the glory days of the Harlem Renaissance through the memories of Bruce Nugent, a co-founder of the revolutionary literary journal Fire!!. (Directed by Rodney Evans, 2004, 94 minutes). Rated R

Sunday, March 16                
Family Day
1–5:30 p.m.
Free


Enjoy a fun-filled day of exciting art activities, live music and theatrical performances with family and friends. Admission is free for all visitors.

Thursday, March 27            
Aaron Douglas in Perspective
6:30 p.m.
Auditorium
Free


In conjunction with Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist, artist, scholar and collector Dr. David Driskell, distinguished University Professor of Art, Emeritus, University of Maryland and former professor at Fisk University, will speak about his personal relationship with the artist and discuss selected aspects of Douglas’ work.

Organizer
Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist was organized by the Spencer Museum of Art, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Dr. Susan Earle, curator, and Stephanie Fox Knappe, exhibition coordinator. The exhibition and accompanying catalogue are made possible in part with support from the Henry Luce Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

Exhibition Itinerary
The exhibition tour follows Douglas’ trajectory with three of its venues closely related to the artist's career: northeast Kansas, where he grew up; Nashville, where he taught for 29 years; and New York, where he took center stage in the Harlem Renaissance.

Spencer Museum of Art (Lawrence, Kan.)                
Sept. 8–Dec. 2, 2007

Frist Center for the Visual Arts                    
Jan.18–April 13, 2008

Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C.)         
May 9–Aug. 3, 2008

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York)         
Aug. 30–Nov. 30, 2008

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