New Harlem Renaissance exhibit to showcase a revolutionary time in Black art

WNYC News | Aug 27, 2023
“The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism,” will include the works of more than 100 artists from the early 20th century — a time early in the Great Migration, when Black life and Black art was being transformed. It was an artistic revolution that, according to the Met, upended the international understanding of modern art and modern life and changed “the very fabric of early 20th-century modern art.”
Curator Denise Murrell, said the term “Harlem Renaissance” generally refers to a cohort of artists who were “committed to the idea of portraying the modern Black subject in a modern way,” reflecting the changing cultural reality and vibrancy of places like Harlem. She described the style as one that combines African aesthetics with more experimental and expressionistic forms of European modernism.
The Harlem Renaissance, she added, “is, in many ways, a retrospective term.” During the moment itself, it was referred to as the “New Negro Movement” — a term derived from the title of a book published in 1925 by author Alain Locke, a professor at Howard University.
The Harlem Renaissance wasn’t confined to Harlem, however. While a core group of artists and literary figures did emerge from New York City, Murrell said it was “always a nationwide movement.” More than a specific geographic location, it was an idea or philosophy that gathered together artists in places like Philadelphia, Chicago and Oakland.

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