Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black AmericaIn the 1920s, Harlem was the capital of Black America and home to an epochal African-American cultural flowering called the Harlem Renaissance. This book presents the work of the most important visual artists of the day, including Meta Warrick Fuller, Aaron Douglas and Palmer Hayden. |
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Contents
Foreword | 7 |
Chronology of the Harlem Renaissance 191929 | 29 |
Chronologies of the Artists | 174 |
Copyright | |
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135th Street branch A'Lelia Aaron Douglas Afro-American Alain Locke American Negro Art Gallery Art Museum Aspects of Negro Bearden Black American Black American art Black American artists Black Art Black artists Black Culture Carl Van Vechten Center for Research Charles City Club Countee Cullen cpls D.C. Gift Douglas's Ethiopia Awakening Fisk University God's Trombones Hand gravure print Harlem Renaissance Harlem Renaissance artists Harlemites Harmon Foundation Howard University Hurston illus Included James Weldon Johnson jazz John Henry series Langston Hughes literary Meta Warrick Fuller mural Museum in Harlem Museum of American Museum of Art n.d. Silver print NAACP National Museum Negro Artists novel Oil on canvas One-man exhibition Opportunity painters painting Palmer Hayden Paris photographs Plate portrait published racial Research in Black Schomburg Center shown Smithsonian Institution sponsored Studio Museum themes Thurman UNIA W.E.B. Du Bois Washington Watercolor White William H York Public Library Zee Collection Zee's