Best known for the vibrant collages he began making in the
1960s, Romare Bearden also created paintings, prints and
photographs in the course of a prolific and inventive career.
He was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, to middle-class
African-American parents; during the Great Migration his
family resettled in New York. Although Bearden lived in North
Carolina only briefly as a child, he spent summers there
with his extended family. African-American life both in urban
settings and in the rural South offered him a rich source
of subject matter. The Bearden family took an active role
in the Harlem Renaissance, and their circle of friends included
Langston Hughes, Duke Ellington, and W. E. B. Du Bois.
In 1935 Bearden completed a degree at New York University,
where he took many art courses. Already an accomplished cartoonist
and illustrator, Bearden immediately began further study
with former Dadaist George Grosz at the Art Students League.
Later, after serving at domestic posts during World War Two,
Bearden traveled to Paris with assistance of the G.I. Bill
to study art history and philosophy at the Sorbonne. Although
he began his artistic career as a social realist, his time
in Europe steered his work in a more abstract and improvisational
direction. During this period, Bearden engaged in intense
study of the art historical tradition, assimilating themes
and, at times, compositional structures of past works.
From the late 1930s to 1967 Bearden held intermittent employment
as a caseworker for the New York City Department of Social
Services. His job gave him glimpses of the struggles of people,
particularly New York Gypsies, to keep their culture alive
amid the pressures of urban life. By the same token, Bearden
was keenly aware that the rural, African-American culture
of the South was disappearing, and he felt a strong pull
toward documenting it in his work. With regard to this subject
matter, Bearden wrote in 1969, “It is not my aim to
paint about the Negro in terms of propaganda . . .
[but] the life of my people as I know it, passionately and
dispassionately as Brueghel. My intention is to reveal through
pictorial complexity the life I know.” (1)
For Bearden, the medium of collage, which he adopted in
the early 1960s, provided the means to this end. Each piece
brings together a vast array of materials, patterns, and
colors, synthesizing all into an elegant whole. Bearden’s
intellectual frame of reference is similarly broad and encompasses
everything from popular culture, to religion, to classical
myth. In both design and spirit, his work celebrates the
diversity of the human community. Bearden used the phrase “prevalence
of ritual” to describe his view of continuity across
generations and cultures, in which truths specific to the
African-American experience find expression in their connection
to universal themes and imagery.
In the late 1960s Bearden tended to treat his human subjects
as monumental, iconic, and magnificent, no matter what their
social standing. Posed frontally or in profile, in the foreground,
they often possess the formality of figures in ancient Egyptian
or Greek art, or in Mexican murals or quattrocento Italian
painting. In the 1970s, landscape motifs became more prominent
in Bearden’s work. Beginning in 1973, Bearden began
spending part of each year at a second home on the Caribbean
island of St. Martin, where his wife, Nanette, had family
roots.
Quite early in his career, Bearden developed ties with downtown
galleries and artists, including fellow jazz lover Stuart
Davis. He regularly showed his work in New York and elsewhere
beginning in 1939, including at a series of sell-out shows
at Cordier & Ekstrom , New York, in the 1960s and 70s.
By the time of his death in 1988, he had achieved critical
success and paved the way for future African-American artists
through his involvement with the Studio Museum of Harlem
and the Cinque Gallery.
Bearden’s work is included in major public collections
including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum
of American Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Studio Museum in Harlem, among
others. He has had retrospectives at the Mint Museum of Art
(1980), the Detroit Institute of the Arts (1986), and the
Studio Museum in Harlem (1991). In 2003 the National Gallery
in Washington, D.C., organized a major retrospective of Bearden’s
work that subsequently traveled to the San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum
of American Art, and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.
1. Romare Bearden, “Rectangular Structure in My Montage
Paintings,” Leonardo 2 (January 1969), quoted
in Alexandra Anderson-Spivy, “Romare Bearden: Modern
Classicist,” Romare Bearden: The Human Condition (New
York: ACA Galleries, 1991), n. p.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries