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Rhapsodies In Black : Art Of The Harlem Renaissance

  • Rhapsodies In Black : Art Of The Harlem Renaissance
  • Attribution

    [contributors, David A. Bailey ... [et al.]]
  • Publication Details

    Book, Hayward Gallery, the Institute of International Visual Arts, 1997
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
     OVERSIZE (UPPER)  N6538.N5 R56 1997  AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    Rhapsodies in Black: Art of the Harlem Renaissance examines the cultural reawakening of Harlem in the 1920s and 1930s as a key moment in twentieth-century art history, one that transcended regional and racial boundaries. Published to coincide with the exhibition that opens in England and travels to the United States, this catalog reflects the Harlem Renaissance’s impressive range of art forms–literature, music, dance, theater, painting, sculpture, photography, film, and graphic design. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
  • Authors

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • "Jointly published by the Hayward Gallery, the Institute of International Visual Arts on the occasion of the exhibition Rhapsodies in Black: art of the Harlem Renaissance, organized by the Hayward Gallery, London in collaboration with the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. and the Institute of International Visual Arts, London"–T.p. verso
    • "Exhibition devised and selected by Richard J. Powell and David A. Bailey"–T.p. verso
    • Rhapsodies in Black takes a fresh look at the Harlem Renaissance, contesting narrow interpretations of it as an isolated phenomenon confined to artists of color inhabiting a few square miles of Manhattan and, instead, recognizing it as a historical moment of global significance, with connections to Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, and other parts of the United States, in particular Chicago and the Deep South. Like jazz musicians, the artists of the Harlem Renaissance era traveled and interacted, and their art was cosmopolitan, inspired by European modernism as well as the cultural and artistic groundswell of black America. Two influences dominated in the art of early modernism: African art and the vitality of big city life. In Harlem, as in Paris and Berlin, artists were inspired to seek new forms and to collaborate on performances, films, and publications. Rhapsodies in Black speaks across the arts, reaching out from an exploration of the painters and sculptors of the time to consider film, theater, and dance. With contributions by distinguished authors from both sides of the Atlantic, it offers a kaleidoscope of provocative readings, showing that the issues and ideas of the Harlem Renaissance still resonate today
  • Contents

    • Introduction / David A. Bailey
    • Re/Birth of a Nation / Richard J. Powell
    • Voodoo Macbeth / Simon Callow
    • Like the Gypsy’s Daughter or Beyond the Potency of Josephine Baker’s Eroticism / Andrea D. Barnwell
    • Paul Robeson and the Problem of Modernism / Jeffrey C. Stewart
    • Modern Tones / Paul Gilroy
    • Still / Martina Attille
    • Harlem on Our Minds / Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
    • A Chronology of Visual Art and Culture, 1919-1938
  • ISBN

    • 0520212681
    • 0520212630
    • 185332163x
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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