Description:

Jacob Armstead Lawrence
New York, New Jersey, (1917 - 2000)
Two Rebels exhibition poster, 1963
lithograph
Biography from Michael Rosenfeld Gallery: Jacob Lawrence was born in Atlantic City and came of age in Harlem during the Great Depression.

During the 1930s, Lawrence received early artistic training under Charles Alston at the Utopia Children's Center in Harlem, and the Harlem Art Workshops at 135th Street Public Library and 306 West 141st Street, which were run by Augusta Savage. Both Alston and Savage encouraged Lawrence in his studies and helped him secure scholarships for art classes and steady employment as an easel painter for the WPA (1938-40).

Inspired by everyday life in Harlem and the history of African-Americans in the United States, Lawrence developed a distinctive style of narrative painting featuring a flattened picture plane and boldly colored figures. In 1937, Lawrence began a narrative suite based on the life of the Haitian leader Toussaint L'Ouverture. He would eventually go on to create nine narrative series based on African-American life and heroes, including the now-famous series, "Migration of the Negro".

In 1941 Lawrence joined the roster of artists at Edith Halpert's Downtown Gallery, a leading gallery specializing in American art, and gained widespread recognition in 1944 when the Museum of Modern Art in New York organized the first traveling exhibition of his "Migration" series. The theme of migration continued to be an important subject for Lawrence, but he also represented African-Americans at work and play, and at home and abroad.

Jacob Lawrence lived and worked in Seattle, Washington with his wife, artist Gwendolyn Knight, until his death in 2000. In 2000, The Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Foundation was established to serve as an educational resource on the art of Lawrence and his wife, artist Gwendolyn Knight, and a catalogue raisonné was published, documenting over 900 of Jacob Lawrence's paintings, drawings, and murals.

  • Dimensions: 26 1/4"H x 19"W
  • Medium: lithograph

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October 7, 2023 11:00 AM EDT
Indianapolis, IN, US

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