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  1. The Met Aims to Get Harlem Right, the Second Time Around. The museum catches up to the vital lessons of the Harlem Renaissance, with its American, European and African exchanges and its cultural ...

  2. 24 de fev. de 2022 · Another Harlem Renaissance-era kingmaker was the writer Alain Locke, dubbed the movement’s “dean” for his mentorship of figures like Hughes and Hurston and his insistence that Black artists ...

  3. 17 de fev. de 2011 · Jacob Lawrence to Romare Bearden, 3 Apr. 1971. Romare Bearden papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Romare Bearden grew up in Harlem, surrounded by the cultural explosion of the 1920s. During the 1930s he studied art, worked as a cartoonist, and was a member of the Harlem Artists Guild. Until his retirement in 1969, Bearden ...

  4. As the May 1927 issue of The Crisis demonstrates, performing artists were integral to establishing the international profile of the Harlem Renaissance. With her choreography and stage presence, Josephine Baker took Paris by storm and helped popularize the homegrown musical art form of jazz—especially its penchant for syncopation and improvisation—worldwide.

  5. 17 de dez. de 2023 · The Harlem Renaissance fostered a new era for black artists and, according to writer and philosopher Alain Locke, transformed “social disillusionment to race pride.” Harlem attracted nearly 175,000 African Americans – making it one of the largest concentrations of black people in the world at the time – who left the South during the “Great Migration” to seek better treatment and ...

  6. 10 de jul. de 2020 · Harlem Renaissance. By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on July 10, 2020 • ( 0 ) Between 1919 and 1934 African-American artists flocked to New York City, specifically to Harlem. This era was to become one of the most prolific periods of African-American writing. What Alain Locke called in 1925 a “New Negro Movement” was later defined by historians as ...

  7. The groundbreaking exhibition The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism explores the comprehensive and far-reaching ways in which Black artists portrayed everyday modern life. Through some 160 works of painting, sculpture, photography, film, and ephemera, explore the new Black cities that took shape in the 1920s–40s in New York City ...