Aaron Douglas
People may ask, what other than a tornado can come out of Kansas? Well,
Aaron
Douglas was born of May 26, 1899 in Topeka, Kansas. Aaron Douglas
was a
"Pioneering Africanist" artist who led the way in using
African-
oriented imagery in visual art during the Harlem Renaissance of
1919- 1929. His
work has been credited as the catalyst for the genre
incorporating themes in
form and style that affirm the validity of the black
consciousness and
experience in America. His parents were Aaron and Elizabeth
Douglas. In 1922, he
graduated from the University of Nebraska School of Fine
Arts in Lincoln. Who
thought that this man would rise to meet W.E.B. Du
Bois's 1921 challenge,
calling for the transforming hand and seeing eye of
the artist to lead the way
in the search for the African American identity.
Yet, after a year of teaching
art in Kansas City, Missouri, Douglas moved to
New York City's Harlem
neighborhood in 1924 and began studying under German
artist Winold Reiss. His
mentor discouraged Douglas's penchant for
traditional realist painting and
encouraged him to explore African art for
design elements would express racial
commitment in his art. The young painter
embraced the teachings of Reiss to
develop a unique style incorporating
African- American and black American
subject matter. He soon had captured the
attention of the leading black scholars
and activists. About the time of his
marriage on June 18, 1924, to Alta Sawyer,
Douglas began to create
illustrations for the periodicals. Early the following
year, one of his
illustrations appeared on the front cover of Opportunity
magazine, which
awarded Douglas its first prize for drawing. Also, in 1925,
Douglas's
illustrations were published in Alain Looke's survey of the
Harlem
Renaissance, The New Negro. Publisher Looke called Douglas a
"pioneering
Africanist," and that stamp of praise and approval for the
artist
influenced future historians to describe Douglas as "the father of
Black
American art." His fame quickly spread beyond Harlem, and began to
mount
painting exhibitions in Chicago and Nashville, among the numerous other
cities,
and to paint murals and historical narratives interpreting black
history and
racial pride. During the mid- 1920's, Douglas was an important
illustrator for
Crisis, Vanity Fair, Opportunity, Theatre Arts Monthly,
Fire and Harlem. In
1927, after illustrating an anthology of verse by
black poets, Caroling Dusk,
Douglas completed a series of paintings for
poet James Weldon Johnson's book of
poems, God's Trombones: Seven Negro
Sermons in Verse. Douglas's images for the
book were inspired by Negro
Spirituals, customs of Africans and black history.
The series soon to
became among the most celebrated of Douglas's work. It
defined figures with
the language of Synthetic Cubism and borrowed from the
lyrical style of Reiss
and the forms of African sculpture. Through his drawings
for the series,
Douglas came close to inventing his own painting style by this
combination of
elements in his work. During this time, Douglas collaborated with
various
poets. It was also his desire to capture the black expression through
the use
of paint. He spent a lot of time watching patrons of area nightclubs
in
Harlem. Douglas said that most of his paintings that were captured in
these
particular nightclubs were mainly inspired through music that was
played.
According to Douglas, the sounds of the music was heard
everywhere and were
created mostly during the Harlem Renaissance by
well-trained artists. Douglas's
work was looked upon by most critics as a
breath of fresh air. His work
symbolized geometric formulas, circles,
triangles, rectangles, and squares
became the dominant design motifs for
Douglas. It was in Douglas's series of
paintings called God Trombones that
Douglas first expressed his commitment
through the use of geometric shapes
for Black artists. The faces and limbs in
these series of paintings are
carefully drawn to reveal African features and
recognizable Black poses. In
God's Trombones, Douglas achieved his mastery of
hard- edge painting using
symbolized features and lines. Through his use of
these things he was able to
bring to life the stiffness in the figures which
symbolized Art Deco. But,
unlike the decorative programs that exist in Art Deco,
most of Douglas's work
capitalized on the movement that was influenced by the
rhythms of Art
Nouveau. Each of the paintings in the God's Trombone series
expresses the
humanist concerns of Douglas. For example, in Judgment Day, one of
the seven
Negro sermons Douglas illustrated for James Weldon Johnson, he planned
to
place emphasize on the positive appearance of Black power. In this
painting,
Gabriel, who represents the archangel, sounds the trumpet to
awaken the dead
from their spiritual rest. He is portrayed in this Painting
as a lean Black man
from whom the last earthly vocal sound is heard. The
sound, which is perceived
to travel across the world, is the inventive music
of the Black man, and his
blues. The music, which is perceived to waken all
nations, is the song of a
bluesman or famous trumpet player. The musician,
who is consequently the artist,
stands in the center of the universe sounding
the loud horn on Judgment Day.
Douglas also has followed Johnson's
chronicle and used simplified figures and
forms to permit his interpretation
of the Black man's place of position to
dominate the theme. At the height of
his popularity, Douglas left for Europe in
1931 to spend a year studying
at L'Acadenie Scandinave in Paris. When he
returned to New York in 1932, the
Great Depression was engulfing America.
Douglas completed, for the New
York Public Library in 1934, a series of murals
depicting the entire African-
American experience from African Heritage, the
Emancipation, life in the
rural South, and the contemporary urban dilemma. Three
years later after
Charles S. Johnson (an activist in the Harlem Renaissance
joined the Fisk
University faculty and became the University's president in the
1940's
and a fellow black artist) recruited Douglas to establish an art
department
in Nashville's Fisk University. Edwin Harlston of Charleston,
South
Carolina completed a series of highly significant murals. These
murals depicted
the course of Negro History. Douglas taught painting and was
chair of the art
department at Fisk from 1937 until his retirement in 1966.
Prior to Douglas's
death in Nashville of February 3, 1979, his work had been
exhibited throughout
the country and featured in companion volumes, including
Paintings by Aaron
Douglas (1971), by David Driskell, Gregory Ridley, and
D. L. Graham and The
Centuries of Black American Art (1976) by David
Driskell. In the decade
following his death, the innovative art of
"pioneering Africanist"
Aaron Douglas was features in numerous
exhibitions and in critical publications.
Bibliography
Johnson,
James Weldon, God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in
Verse. New York:
Penguin Books, 1990. Kirschke, Amy Helene, Aaron Douglas: Art,
Race, and
the Harlem Renaissance. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi,
1995.
Lewis, David Levering, The Portable Harlem Renaissance Reader, Volume
1.
New York: Viking,
1994.