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Haiti to Harlem: Toussaint L'Ouverture & Jacob LawrenceMain MenuJacob Lawrence: The StorytellerPaintings to PrintsThe Life of Toussaint L'Ouverture in PrintContextualizing The PrintsCurating the ExhibitionImprints and ImpactHighlights the impact of the Jacob Lawrence prints in relation to both Lawrence's life and the history of global POC liberation.About the CuratorsMeet the Fall 2024 Curatorial Class!Select Bibliography
Harlem
1media/10.png2024-12-12T19:57:16-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80461177Driven by the Great Migration (1916–1970), the Black American diaspora united brilliant minds, transforming Harlem into a hub of creativity and solidarity amid systemic discrimination. This period fueled a powerful Black art movement focused on resistance, community, and hope, known as the “Harlem Renaissance.” Established in 1925, the Schomburg Collection at the 135th Street Branch Library became a cornerstone in educating Harlemites on Black history from around the world. Artists like Langston Hughes and Augusta Savage drew inspiration from this collection, weaving global Black narratives into their work. As the first Black republic born from a successful slave revolution, Haiti resonated deeply with Harlem artists as a model of resilience and pride. Jacob Lawrence’s series on the Haitian Revolution reflects this connection, engaging Black American experiences in a broader global dialogue on anti-colonialism and racial justice.plain2024-12-19T05:50:24-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80Similar to the raw horror depicted in his Hiroshima series and his illustrations for Langston Hughes’s poetry book, One-Way Ticket, Jacob Lawrence’s original 41 paintings portraying Toussaint L’Ouverture’s life vividly illustrate the defeats and violence endured by enslaved people. However, in his print series, he notably omitted images of this brutality, opting instead to create an uplifting representation of Toussaint L’Ouverture’s legacy.
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1media/LoL BG.pngmedia/LoL BG.png2024-10-21T19:31:14-07:00Marcella LeGrand51843a8fae6d31ec13dea6e2da3cfe9df2860f45Legacies of LiberationAnne Paxton74Legacies of Liberation brings our attention to the parallels between the Haitian Revolution and Jacob Lawrence’s fight against white supremacy in the U.S., as well as the ever-present question of the path forward after liberation.image_header2024-12-18T07:36:14-08:00Anne Paxton339e20ab257c28749698a3b6eb05a9e58a5eefc3
12024-12-12T20:04:50-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80Contextualizing The PrintsSibel Zandi-Sayek4visual_path2024-12-17T07:54:08-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80
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12024-12-13T13:33:09-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80Curating the Exhibition2visual_path2024-12-13T14:34:33-08:00Sibel Zandi-Sayek73cde7a43bd5eb518df1a2b6db82852f9eafbb80
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1media/10_thumb.png2024-12-05T07:44:50-08:00Hiroshima Farmers2Hiroshima Farmers from "Hiroshima" (1983)media/10.pngplain2024-12-13T14:20:09-08:00
1media/22_thumb.png2024-12-05T07:57:36-08:00The Ballad of Margie Polite2The Ballad of Margie Polite from "One-way ticket [poems]" (1949)media/22.pngplain2024-12-13T14:24:49-08:00