Harlem jazz jamboree

Lewis, Norman (1909–1979)


Item type:
painting
Date of creation:
1943
Height:
18.0 cm  (7 1/16 in.)
Width:
16.0 cm  (6 5/16 in.)
Technique / Medium:
oil on canvas
Place of creation:
New York (New York, United States)
School:
Social realism

Description

This colorful painting includes images of musicians and of instruments suggestive of piano, trumpet, and perhaps other instruments. Commentary from museum website: Born and raised in Harlem, Norman Lewis began his formal artistic training at the New York Vocational High School, studying commercial design and drawing. He later attended the Savage Studio of Arts and Crafts and studied at the John Reed Club Art School from 1933-35. Lewis was a central figure in the African American community and a member of the "306" group of artists, writers, poets, and performing artists who met at 306 East 141st Street. In 1937 he formed the federally funded Harlem Community Art Center, where he taught, and was employed by the Federal Art Project funded by the Works Progress Administration.

Lewis lived and worked in the center of the jazz world, which inspired many of his compositions. His early paintings of the 1930s and 40s reveal his interest in Social Realism. In this scene, the artist vividly portrays the energy and variety of characters that populated Harlem's jazz clubs. Lively black outlines punctuated with brilliant red paint delineate the silhouettes, poses, gestures, and expressions at the jamboree. Whether singing, playing, smoking, listening, or smirking, an animated jumble of features, textures and colors evokes the crowd. The syncopation of hot reds and cool blues in Lewis's scene harmonize with the sounds and improvisational riffs of jazz music.

Iconclass

48C7532
small group of musicians, chamber orchestra, jazz band

Instruments [MIMO Code] (notes)

Upright pianoforte [2311]
Trumpet [4446]

RIdIM images


© Estate of Norman W. Lewis; Courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery LLC, New York, NY

Image URLs

image link 2

RIdIM record id

5900