For nearly five decades, Jacob Lawrence has been widely regarded as America's most important black artist. His work is known throughout the world for its depiction of the black American experience from the Civil War to the civil rights movement and beyond. But Lawrence's paintings are more than a chronicle of this history. He has created a uniquely American vision that affirms the place of all individuals in our society and honors the struggle for independence. Jacob Lawrence has given us powerful, lasting images which, when seen as a whole, constitute a narrative of epic proportions.
This major book celebrates the creative genius of Jacob Lawrence. It is the most comprehensive survey ever made of his work and traces his developments as an artists as well as places his work within the tradition of American modernism. In this context it examines for the first time works he has completed since 1974, when he was honored with a retrospective at the Whitney Museum of Art.
The paintings reproduced here illustrate a broad array of moods and subjects. Representing each of the artist's significant periods, they range from fond portraits of Harlem street life in the 1930s to angry depictions of racial injustice during the 1960s, from images of people working in harmony to bleak depictions of civilization shattered by nuclear war. Yet together they reveal an essential unity in Lawrence's work. His distinctive cubist-expressionist style and his basic humanist credo remain intact throughout fifty years of changing artistic fashion.
The artist's life encompasses a broad spectrum of experience that formed the character of three American generations. He was raised in the Depression, and his first art training was through social programs under FDR's New Deal. In the late 1930s he was employed as a painter by the WPA, then served in the Coast Guard in World War II.
From the start of his career, he achieved success and recognition in the competitive world of New York artists and galleries, all the time maintaining a powerful representational style that went counter to prevailing forces of Abstract Expressionism.
Ellen Wheat examines Jacob Lawrence's life as an integrated whole. She discusses the cultural and political grounding of 1930s Harlem, effects on artists of the Depression and New Deal, art in New York, all in relations to Lawrence's long-standing commitment to depicting the history of black Americans and to the narrative series format he adopted to convey it. Among other subjects, he has dealt with Toussaint L'Ouverture, Harriet Tubman, the community of Harlem, the American South, Nigeria, civil rights, and John Brown. Wheat also documents and analyzes developments in the artist's technique and style in relation to the work of some of his teachers and peers (Charles Alston, Claude McKay, Romare Bearden) and those who influenced his work (Orozco, Albers, Grosz, Giotto).
Throughout these pages Lawrence speaks of his work and development in the first person. The author draws on her numerous interviews with the artist since 1982, as well as other sources. This chronological overview of Lawrence's career is enhanced by over 150 illustrations of his work, 85 in color, and a generous selection of photos that place him in his studio, in the art world at large, and among his friends and colleagues.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
'My pictures express my life and experience. I paint the things I know about and the things I have experienced. The things I have experienced extend into my national, racial, and class group. So I paint the American scene.' - Jacob Lawrence, Author of American Painter
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Seller: Better World Books: West, Reno, NV, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Pages intact with minimal writing/highlighting. The binding may be loose and creased. Dust jackets/supplements are not included. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Seller Inventory # 3167354-6
Seller: Else Fine Booksellers, Tacoma, WA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. Exhibit monograph. 235 pages, notes, chronology, bibliography, index. Slight shelf wear. Text clean. Seller Inventory # 002628
Seller: Aeolian Books, Marysville, WA, U.S.A.
Wrappers. First Printing. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. 235 pages with index, bibliography, exhibition catalogue and checklist, notes. 109 color plates and 80 black and white figures. Fine. Out-of-print. Seller Inventory # 03942
Seller: "Pursuit of Happiness" Books, Oakland, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Good. Gd. condition - Jacob lawerence on exhibition . (KI69260z). Book. Seller Inventory # 9260z
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Softcover, 236 pages, very good condition; spine lightly spotted; no internal marks. Foreign shipping may be extra. Seller Inventory # JaLaUn35
Seller: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.
Softbound. Second 1990 printing. Illustrated wraps. 235 pgs w/ color & bw plates, figures. Main essay by Ellen Harkins Wheat, with a contribution by Patricia Hills. Includes 80 figures and 109 color, black and white plates. Chronology, list of exhibitions, bibliography, index. Checklist of the exhibition illustrates all 149 works in the exhibit in black and white. VG (light edge-wear to wraps; scuffs & scratches. spine ends rubbed & creased. light foxing to textblock edges.). Seller Inventory # 4326.1
Seller: Bookish Me, Plainfield, NJ, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: As New. Glossy paper back Published as catalogue to the major retrospective exhibition with the same title. Organized by the Seattle Art Museum. Signed, dated and inscribed: To Ethel. Front cover: Lawrence's "Bread, Fish, Fruit, 1995. Frontispiece: Jacob Lawrence, 1986. 11.5 x 8.5 inches. Seller Inventory # ABE-1675720879995
Seller: Pistil Books Online, IOBA, Seattle, WA, U.S.A.
Oversize Paperback. Condition: Near Fine. A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 8 5/8"w x 11 1/4"h. 236 pages. Slight wear to cover. This comprehensive 1986 retrospective catalogue surveys Jacob Lawrence's distinguished career as one of America's foremost African American artists, featuring over 150 illustrations documenting his dynamic cubist style, narrative painting series depicting black American history from the Great Migration through the civil rights movement, and his contributions to American modernism. Keywords: African American Art, Migration Series, Harlem Renaissance, Dynamic Cubism, Narrative Painting, Social Realism, University Washington, Exhibition Catalog, 20th Century Modernism, Civil Rights Era, Figurative Painting, Seattle Retrospective 2. Seller Inventory # 160137
Seller: THE CROSS Art + Books, Sydney, NSW, Australia
28.0 x 21.0cms 236pp colour illusts very good paperback The chapters are: origins 1917 to 1940; early maturity 1940 to 1949; mid-career in New York 1949 to 1968; at home in the West to present. Seller Inventory # 20388034
Quantity: 1 available
Seller: GoldBooks, Denver, CO, U.S.A.
Condition: new. Seller Inventory # 21X32_33_0295970111