Out of the Shadows: The African American Male Image in Prints
Transcription
Out of the Shadows: The African American Male Image in Prints
DRAFT Out of the Shadows: African American Male Imagery in Fine Art and Popular Prints Winston Kennedy, 2015. Introduction This study focuses on a small number of artists and printmakers who created a new and revised visual image of the African American male. The images were created at a time when most images made by racist white Americans and Europeans showed blacks as subordinate to the dominant culture. The artists discussed in this study attempted to challenge the predominantly negative representations circulating in American culture by offering alternative and positive images of their subjects. Prints depicting positive masculine images of African American men are difficult to find in various historical repositories. The images in this essay represent literally and figuratively a process of pulling the images of African American male subjects from the negative shadows of the American imagination. These graphic works represent the efforts of various artists including African American, European, and EuroAmericans to recreate positive and representative images of black males. This essay is an attempt to critique and demonstrate that a small number of artists and artisans created images that went beyond the stereotypical and derogatory construction of African American male images so prevalent during the last three centuries of American visual history. Over the last thirty years, I have found fascinating and disturbing images of black life in private and public collections, and I’ve come to realize that the study of visual culture provides additional perspectives for viewing history. For instance, in an examination of two published accounts of the Boston Massacre, I observed different visual interpretations of the death of Crispus Attucks. 1 Figure 1. The Boston Massacre, March 7, 1770, wood engraving by Paul Revere. For example, one of the earliest images of a black ‘hero’ is ambiguously depicted in (Figure 1) wood engraving. The image is of an artist’s depiction of the Boston Massacre and the death of Crispus Attucks. Where is Crispus Attucks in this woodcut? The major and heroic central character, the leader of the group of rebels of the Boston Massacre of March 5, 1770 is neither visibly evident nor centrally positioned in this wood engraving. Executed by Paul Revere and published in the Boston Gazette on March 12, shortly after the event, this engraving celebrated a cardinal incident in the movement toward the moment of the American Revolution from England. It was the moment when the British soldiers in Boston fired upon the protestors led by Crispus Attucks, an African American. Why is Attucks not centrally pictured here as a defiant hero? It was well documented that Attucks lead the protest. What could have cause the diminution of Attucks bravery from this composition? We can only imagine that Revere’s re-creation of the event is a racialized response. From our contemporary platform of knowledge, we would infer that Attucks’ presence was re-imagined because Revere did not wish to have an African American man visually associated with this significant moment of American history. The artist, Revere, exercised the license to reconstruct history. Revere’s visual editing impacts our visual memory of this massacre. 2 Another depiction of this event (Figure 2) is a version used in a number of publications. This version of the Boston Massacre places Crispus Attucks heroically front-and-center. It was published by Pufford several months after Paul Revere's print. Figure 2. The Boston Massacre, 1770, John Pufford In this version of the same incident Attucks heroic image is centrally located by the artist. He is pictured as a proactive participant. Attucks seizes the front of the British soldier’s musket at the same moment that it is fired into his head. In this moment of death the club that was earlier brandished remain in the grasp of his right hand. The image that Revere cut into the woodblock should have had more of this quality. One possible explanation for the absence of the Attucks heroic image from the earlier Paul Revere woodcut is given by John Parry. During the seventeenth century, for example, pictures of Black slaves or servants in America were virtually non-existent, save for a very minor figure or two in the lower corner of a decorative European map of the New World. Among colonial images the single appearance of a Black king as one of the three Magi in a unique religious painting was completely offset by dozens of pictures and even historical portraits of Indian kings and orators; the only Blacks in colonial portraiture were household servants, endlessly waiting at the feet or at the elbow of their White masters. At the end of the eighteenth century, a few American painters, working in London, managed to incorporate Black figures in semi heroic compositions or history paintings; otherwise, Negroes were usually forced to play comic parts in American genre scenes and political cartoons well into the 1800s. Obviously, for most artists, slavery held relatively 3 little interest compared to the foreign and more fascinating appeal of Indian subject matter. It was not until the height of the abolition movement in the 1850s, followed by the Civil War era and then Reconstruction, that images of Black men began to change drastically in content as they multiplied rapidly in number. Burgeoning interest in the legal end of slavery and the new life of the Negro thereafter resulted in a major reversal of role.1 The prints included in this essay provide the foundation for my argument as to the visualization of black men as resisters and revolutionaries, men who fought to change their visual constructions from the stereotypical docile, happy-go-lucky, non-threatening, passive black man to men in control of their destinies. Many of these prints explore the representation of black people at work and in their communities. Further, they assist the viewer to mitigate the destructiveness of the negative imaginations and mythos projected on African American males. The printmakers in this essay created African American images that were both representative and idealized. However, the most important consideration, for the purposes of this essay, is that the images are mostly individualized and positive. This essay is in search of a African American male self-agency relative to visual representation. This essay is a rejection of the false visual stereotypes and an affirmation that… who we are, fundamentally, does not come before our existence; therefore, we are free to reject the negative taxonomies through which others attempt to define us-attempt to imprison us.2 I will discuss the image of the African American male in thematic areas such as resistance and rebellion, labor, and portraiture. In the body of this material, I will discuss the works of African American printmakers and how their prints contributed to a more positive visual record of the African American male experience especially those works from the first part of the twentieth century. At the beginning and the end of the essay, I will frame this discussion with historical prints made by white British and American artists whose prints are central to and supportive of my argument. 4 Resistance and Rebellion Figure 3 The Hunted Slave, 1865, Engraving C. G. Lewis “The Hunted Slave”, 1865, Engraving, C. G. Lewis is after a 1861painting by Richard Andsell (1815-1885).3 This image inspired by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s 1842, poem “The Slave in the Dismal Swamp.” This engraving, although from the middle part of the 19th century and created near the end of the Civil War, is a precursor of the ideas of Frederick Douglass as expressed in his West India speech, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did, and it never will”.4 The print depicts a determining moment of freedom hypothesized almost a century later by the Martinican psychologist, Frantz Fanon. He argues that the decisive moment of manhood occurs when one is willing to shed blood for ones freedom.5 The runaway slave demonstrates defiance and resolve of purpose as he is depicted cornered by mastiffs in the Great Dismal Swamps. Wielding a short ax, the male slave kills his “enslavers” who are symbolically represented by the dogs. Already, he has been successful in killing one or two of the dogs (enslavers) in this struggle for his freedom. The defiant slave continues to fight. In the process of fighting for freedom he, automatically, fights to protect his wife. The Dismal Swamps are located on the coastal plains of Virginia near the North Carolina border. It was a vast almost inaccessible swamp, heavily wooded, dark, infested with snakes, insects and other wildlife. This “dismal” area for slaveholders became area of “refuge and freedom” for runaway slaves - many lived their remaining lives within the Dismal Swamp. “…which may have had 2,000 residents at its peak. Theirs was a 5 harsh life, but slaves were no stranger to a difficult existence, and many managed to preserve their freedom for varying lengths of time.”6 There were frequent occasion of run away slaves and sometimes engaged in outright slave rebellions in the colonies during the 17th, 18th and 19th Centuries. There is a dearth of images of these accounts. However, the narrative historical record recounts that the first major conspiracy was betrayed by an indentured servant in the 17th century. A group of African American slaves and indentured servants had decided to revolt on September 13, 1663 at Gloucester County, Virginia.7 The first major slave revolt occurred in New York City on April 7, 1712. As a result, twenty-one blacks were executed, and six others committed suicide. The men had met about midnight, April 6, to take revenge for their master’s abuse. Some were armed with firearms, swords, knives, and hatchets. Paul Cuffee set fire to his master’s house, which attracted a crowd of townspeople. The revolt grew as the insurgents opened fire on the crowd, killing nine whites and wounding five or six more.”8 One of the largest revolts, yet infrequently mentioned in the literature is the early 19th century revolt by armed slaves in Louisiana. Little is known about the revolt in St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana, in 1811, although it has pride of place as the biggest in our history.[my emphasis] Between 300 and 500 slaves, armed with pikes, hoes, and axes but few firearms, marched on New Orleans with flags flying and drum beating. Free Negroes generally supported the regime and helped crush the revolt, but at least one rebel leader from Saint-Dominique, Charles Deslondes, was a free mulatto. The rebels organized well, dividing themselves into companies commanded by officers, but they quickly collapsed in combat against the well-armed militia and regular troops under the command of Wade Hampton.9 Paul Cuffee of New Bedford, Massachusetts and later of Westport, Connecticut was one of the free men of color who used his resources to resist the institution of slavery. He was one of the first leaders of a back to Africa movement in the Americas. 6 Figure 4. Captain Paul Cuffee, wood engraving by Mason and Maas, after a drawing by John Poole, 1812.Library of Congress [and the Schomburg Center] This type of silhouette portraiture (Figure 4) was popular in colonial and early 19th century America. This style was especially used where the artist has some trepidation of his ability to capture a more representative likeness of the sitter. The subject was usually posed in front of a lamp. The resulting light is blocked by the profile of the sitter and that black profile is projected onto a wall with canvas or paper attached, the artist simply traces the profile. The image may be varied in size by the distance of the sitter from the wall. Other devices may be used to further reduce the drawn profile when necessary. In many instances the profile was cut out of black colored paper and mounted onto another surface. This wood engraving, executed by Mason and Maas in 1812, after an earlier drawing by John Poole, shows a profile of Captain Cuffee. The captain’s profile is centered in the upper portion of the engraved frame underneath is an image of one of the captain’s vessels. All is pictured situated in a seaside view with land and bay water visible in the lower half of the composition. In the illustrated frame of the composition is the inscription “Captain Paul Cuffee 1812.” He achieved success in the shipping industry and later became a supporter of the repatriation of African Americans to Sierra Leone, West Africa. Captain Cuffee was born free. After many struggles in farming he developed into a prosperous businessman. He always understood the negative psychological, social and economic limitations placed upon 7 African Americans--both free and enslaved. He was a friend James Forten, a free black and successful ship outfitting merchant in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area. Both were supportive of the work of the American Colonization Society. Captain Cuffee underwrote the expenses of several trips to the African continent to assess resources and find land to receive the future African Americans. Although Forten eventually changed his mind about repatriation as an effective emancipatory strategy, Captain Cuffee, nevertheless, persisted in his support of the back to Africa movement. On January 15, 1817, Forten and other black leaders called a meeting at Bethel to discuss the ACS and the idea of colonization. Almost 3,000 black men packed the church. Three prominent black ministers, Richard Allen, Absalom Jones and John Gloucester, spoke in favor of immigrating to Africa. However, when Forten called for those in favor to say "yea," not a single voice was heard. When he called for those opposed, one tremendous "no" rang out that seemed "as it would bring down the walls of the building." As Forten wrote to Paul Cuffee on January 25, "there was not one sole [sic] that was in favor of going to Africa." 10 Additionally, Captain Cuffee perceived repatriation was an excellent strategy because “If whites, as they said, refused to liberate their slaves only because they feared masses of inferior and dangerous freemen in their midst, then let these freemen, present and future, of their own free choice depart from America for a better life in their native Africa.”11 One of the considerations that permitted Cuffee to persist in his advancement of the idea of the colonization movement is that he was more of a master of his own resources. In that capacity he was able to persue his vision of repatriation as an individual to greater extent than Forten who relied on alliances with Absalom Jones and John Gloucester and finally the vote of the African Americans at the Bethel meeting in 1817. It has been reported that Captain Cuffee persisted in his vision of mass repatriation to Africa for the remainder of his life. Is there anything in the record to show that Captain Paul Cuffee, toward the end of his life, ever doubted the validity of his back-toAfrica idea? After his second voyage to Sierra Leone he had boasted that two thousands pleas for passage to Africa had reached him from the city of Boston.12 8 Denmark Vesey bought himself out of slavery in with money earned from a lottery winning. He was a carpenter in Charleston, South Carolina. In 1822, he led a conspiracy to create a mass insurrection of the slaves of the low country South Carolina. Before the revolt could take place the plans became known to the authorities. Thirty -five slaves were executed. There are not many published images of Black men rising in revolt-killing their enslavers. I would argue that visual images have the power to inspire others to revolt and as a result of images depicting African American men as leaders of rebellions are limited. This rare (Figure 5), small but visually powerful 1831 woodcut from an anti-abolitionist tract illustrates the moment in the willingness of the slaves to fight for freedom. They were led by Nat Turner. He was always dismayed by the injustices and cruelty of the enslavers. He had a vision to under gird his increasing will: I heard a loud noise in the heavens, and the Spirit instantly appeared to me and said the Serpent was loosened, and Christ had laid down The yoke he had borne for the sins of man, and That I should take it on and fight against the Serpent, for the time was fast approaching, When the first should be last and the last should Be first.” -Nat Turner13 The revolutionaries are shown (Figure 5) in the process of fighting and killing in their struggle for freedom. The human forms in the prints are stiffly rendered. Note the awkward position of form #2. All of the participants are shown on the same plane of the composition with the exception of the rebel behind form #3. Seeing this image must have struck a chord of dread in the hearts and imagination of 9 Figure 5. Horrid Massacre in Virginia, 1831. the planter class. Although not admitted widely, this manner of rising-up by slaves was a most feared aspect of the slave owner’s life. It was always there this fear just below the day-to-day surface reality. “Nat Turner raised only about seventy slaves but won fame by killing an unprecedented number of whites. Since the previous plots and risings in Virginia had failed to draw white blood, Turner accomplishment stood out all the more.”14 Figure 6. Discovery of Nat Turner, wood engraving by Clement after W. H. Shelton. Nat Turner is shown in (Figure 6) at the moment of his capture. The artist has chosen to illustrate the event as a moment between to men, the victor and the vanquished. The victor is shown almost impeccably 10 attired in the middle of the woods. He wears clean pants and coat. His rifle, powder horn and knapsack are orderly position. His face is calm. On the other hand, Nat Turner is shown with contorted, almost animalistic eyes. He shows anger concerning this moment of discoverythis moment of failure. His pants are torn at the knee and he is in his bare feet. Turner is depicted stepping out of a cave like wood and brush pile where he has been hiding. Although, he retains his sword at his side his gesture seems to maintain some threat as a fighter. Henry Brown, then a young and enslaved man living in Virginia, witnessed the aftermath of the Nat Turner Rebellion. In his Slave Narrative, he indicates: I did not then know precisely what was the cause of these scenes, for I could not get any very satisfactory information concerning the matter from my master, only that some of the slaves had undertaken to kill their owners; but I have since learned that it was the famous Nat Turner's insurrection that caused all the excitement I witnessed. Slaves were whipped, hung, and cut down with swords in the streets, if found away from their quarters after dark. The whole city was in the utmost confusion and dismay; and a dark cloud of terrific blackness, seemed to hang over the heads of the whites. So true is it, that "the wicked flee when no man pursueth." Great numbers of the slaves were locked in the prison, and many were "half hung," as it was termed; that is, they were suspended to some limb of a tree, with a rope about their necks, so adjusted as not to quite strangle them, and then they were pelted by the men and boys with rotten eggs. This halfhanging is a refined species of cruelty, peculiar to slavery, I believe.15 11 Figure 7. "Effects of the Fugitive Slave Law" artist unknown. Providing more prerogatives for southern slavers to retrieve their “property’ than earlier fugitive laws, the Fugitive Slave law of 1850 made the near safe harbor of the northern free states more distant. The law permitted slave owners to go into northern and or free states to retrieve their “property”. The law not only placed the escaping slave at risk, in many instances the slavers would claim freeman as escaped property. The above illustration shows the attack by “pattyrollers” and slave hunters firing on slaves who are fleeing the bondage of the south. The artists shows the men dressed in the fashion of the day complete with vest, cravat and walking cane. One of the resistors has fallen, perhaps mortally wounded. Figure 8. The Death of Captain Ferrer, the Captain of the Amistad, July, 1839. Library of Congress. 12 The rebellion of the primarily Mende captives aboard the Amistad slaveship in 1839 is represented in the woodcut above (Figure 8). The print represents the moment that the captain of the ship is killed. The Mende are using cutlasses or as weapons. The action of the rebellion is illustrated in a linear fashion across the page. The major action in which the captain is being killed takes place on the left side the composition. The other action on the deck becomes secondary. European and Africans are distinguished by clothing and tone of skin. This moment of victory, very important in terms of resistance and rebellion, is follow during the subsequent year by a judicial victory by the Mende in the Supreme Court of the United States. The lithograph (Figure 9) is a portrait of the leader of the rebels, Cinque. The group’s success came under his leadership. The portrait of him shows a young man of obvious self-composure and sense of self. His portrait, published in the New York Sun newspaper, contrast greatly with many of the other negative caricatured African American males printed images of the period. The prints of Cinque and his men are useful in examining enslaved Africans’ will to resist and rebel at both the physical and judicial level. Figure 9. Joseph Cinquez, lithograph, 1839. 13 Henry Brown was born on a plantation in Louisa County Virginia circa 1815. At approximately 21 years of age he married a washerwoman named Nancy and subsequently had three children. In order to assure that his wife could care for the children he paid Nancy’s master wages for the time that she spent away caring for her own family. Brown was able to make the payments by producing beyond his weekly quota at the tobacco factory where he was enslaved in Richmond, Virginia. Unfortunately, in 1848 his wife and children were sold further south. The following passage described the moment of parting. Although, this description was never imagined in print, this incident caused Henry Brown to prepare to runaway from bondage. As Nancy [Brown] began the customary walk south, shackled to other adult slaves and with her children loaded in a wagon, [Henry ] Brown walked hand-in-hand with her for a few miles. Then he watched, powerless, as his wife and children were taken from him. Devastated, Brown was determined to escape.16 Brown prepared for his escape. He had a wooden box built. With the assistance of his friend, a white abolitionist, he had himself shipped from Richmond, Virginia to an anti-slavery headquarters in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Figure 10. The Resurrection of Henry "Box" Brown at Philadelphia, Lithograph, 1850 In the lithograph (Figure 10) Brown is shown arising from the box as it is opened in Philadelphia. Although, the box was labeled “this side up”, he nevertheless spent two-hours on his head, upside down and almost passed out during the 24-hour journey. The lithograph is arranged to visually narrate the event, Brown is shown inside the shipping box. The 14 top of the box is held by one of the abolitionist to show the shipping address. Both men to the left of the box are holding implements for opening the box. In the box Brown is depicted as well-dressed. Even after his difficult trip his bowtie and clothes are in good order. The artist did not want to depict Henry “Box” Brown clothing disheveled, the abolitionist saw Brown’s unique escape as an opportunity to use in the abolitionist cause. The lithograph portrait (Figure 11) is the frontispiece used in Brown’s later publication entitled The Narrative of Henry Box Brown. Figure 11. Frontispiece portrait of Henry "Box" Brown from the Narrative of Henry Box Brown, 1849. Brown became an abolitionist speaker. Many of his presentation were made with the use of a panorama that visualized the difficult life of slavery in the South. Panoramas were large rolls of canvases containing many scenes, in this instance of slavery in the South. The canvases would be wound slowly from one side of the stage to the next as the narrator lectured about the various themes and scenes shown on the moving canvas. There were solicitations for the contributions of funds to assist Brown in buying his wife and children out of slavery in North Carolina. Unfortunately, he was never re-united with his family. When the Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, Brown left America to England. He was never heard of again after 1864. In his desire for freedom and eventual escape to the North, Brown and many others like him had an impact on both those who made the decision to stay or did 15 not have the opportunity to runaway. That impact was found in the art of resistance. Those who fled to freedom made an inestimable contribution to the people they left behind, which must be weighed against their participation in a safety valve effect. These were the slaves who sort of taking the path of insurrection, most clearly repudiated the regime; who dramatically chose freedom at the highest risk; who never let the others forget that there was an alternative to their condition”17 Figure 12. The Freeman's Defense. (gun battle among rocks between whites and Negroes. Engraving by W. Baker, 1852. Artists found it important to show in their depictions of slavery runaways that they resisted through the use of firearms. They armed themselves as they fought to gain their freedom and used their weapons in their defense. The use of firearms by enslaved men is rarely depicted. Frederick Douglass was born a slave in Maryland. A depiction of the young Douglass escaping from slavery was used as a cover for sheet music. The illustration (Figure 13) “The Fugitive Song” shows him after he has crossed a river. Douglass’s gesture is one of defiance. On the other side of the river, the artist included two men on horseback riding along side dogs. We are to assume that they are in search of Douglass, the slavers riding horses and running tracking dogs. The dogs are 16 searching the far bank of the river for his scent. Douglass is barefoot and carrying a knapsack. Figure 13. The Fugitive's Song, Lithograph by E. W. 1845. Douglass is shown well dressed with the exception of shoes. The print conveys the sense that he is bound for freedom, his index finger is pointed in a northward direction. Those slaves who stayed resisted in many ways. They had to accommodate themselves to the realities of their day-to-day conditions. They, in some instances, slowed their work efforts. Sometimes they feigned an ignorance of instruction given. They intentionally broke plows, 17 hoes and wagons and other implements of production. In many instances, the price they paid was severe punishment, but they resisted. The African American Male Image in Labor Figure 14. The New England Anti-Slavery Almanac, 1841. Library of Congress. A mythology developed among the slavers in America. They constructed a picture of the African Americans as incapable of laboring to provide for themselves. Therefore, the slavers saw themselves as thinking for and ordering the lives of African American men in order that they might provide for themselves and their families. The plight of slaves under this perception was significantly difficult. There were numerous rules and laws in place that made it difficult for a slave or a free man of color to reap the fruit of their labor. In many instances the lives of the free men of color were almost as restricted as their brothers in slavery. The slave owners partially blinded their own eyes to the fact that these men were the labor that provided the profits that made their own fortunes. These African American men pictured above are doing the intense labor of maintaining and driving the southern economy through free labor. Most of the images of black men were dehumanizing and emasculating. This negative perception was cultivated among the owners and other beneficiaries of the system to partially justify the institution of slavery 18 Figure 15. The Escaped Slave. Formerly enslaved on a plantation the runaway slave who has reached Union lines. How will he be integrated in to American labor. The wood engraving(Figure 16) illustrates the Freedman Bureau officer standing in between the white and black group. The Freedman officer serves as an officiating force the struggles between the working class whites of the South and the African American men. The African Americans laborers are ready to fight, ready to defend themselves. Figure 16. The Freedman's Bureau 19 Figure 17. Street Car Scene by John Wilson In the “Street Car Scene”,18 (Figure 17) a 1945Lithograph, by John Wilson, the black worker rides the streetcar alone in a crowd – psychologically alone- in his work for identity and parity within American society. In the shadows of the white American imagination he is a threat constructed out of white American guilt-simultaneous admiration and fear. Immediately, we sense the racial fear of him. We see his vulnerability in this environment of white women and a child. We are able to project onto Wilson’s streetcar composition one of Fanon’s most famous moments in Black Skin, White Mask. Fanon arrives in Paris and the young European child says, “Mamma see the Negro! I’m frightened.” 19 As a result of the least false utterance, the life of the black worker will be at risk. Perhaps, the women will accuse him of a “wandering eye” or, their accusation will be the result of an, in passing and unintended brush against the body any of the women in the close quarters of the streetcar. As a worker, he is making a contribution to the war effort in the Boston Navy Yard. He is working for the preservation of freedom and democracy in the world. This “freedom worker” remains, nevertheless, a negative liability, a black male threat, within the environment of the streetcar and the greater environment of American racial consciousness. Again, to paraphrase Fanon, every where around the black worker is whiteness.20He holds himself tightly together- almost attempting to prevent himself from expanding beyond his immediate seated space. His hands secure his lunch box on his lap. That grasp becomes a way to physically control any automatic/natural movement of his body. His grasp on his lunchbox prevents his hands and body from accidentally coming in contact with the “whiteness” within the streetcar. He is permitted to crossover and to contribute during the war, however, at wars’ end, he will be the first to be fired in the industrial downturn. 20 The social isolation of the black worker is almost palpable. We immediately feel the psychological loneliness of his fight for identity and parity within American society. Unfortunately, the negatively shadowed perceptions of him are not mediated by his wartime contribution to the struggle for American freedom and democracy. Figure 18. Negro Worker, Lithograph by James Wells, 1940. Some of Douglass’ concerns for the natural and positive countenance of African American male portraiture is demonstrated in the works of “the dean of African American printmakers,” James L. Wells. In Wells’ 1940, lithograph entitled “Negro Worker”21 he illustrates the face of an industrial worker. Although, Wells’ worker is very similar to Wilson’s shipyard worker in the “Street Car Scene,” the worker appears, nevertheless, much more self assured than Wilson’s. Wells places his industrial worker in the foreground of the composition with an industrial plant in the background. Wells’ Negro Worker is robust and self-assured and expresses neither the psychological isolation nor physical insecurity seen in Wilson’s shipyard worker. Wells constructs in his portrait subject a more positive relationship of the worker to industrial labor and general manufacturing associated with the urban North. Several years earlier, Wells created a wonderful modernist visual statement concerning the role of the African American worker and his role in the development of the cities. In his relief print entitled “Looking Upward.”22 Wells formally integrates a semi-abstract African American 21 male figure into a composition of various stylized city buildings. The black male figure appears to be a waiter who is holding a serving tray on which he is serving small models of the larger buildings of the city. Although, the small building models served on the tray are normal in their construction, the larger “real” buildings, nevertheless, are swaying and undulating – reflecting the implied movement of the waiter. This print is a wonderful statement by Wells concerning the contribution of the African American worker to the rhythm and cultural life of the cityhow the city is impacted by the African American workers. Figure 19. Looking Upward, Linocut by James Wells, 1930. Many of the fine arts works produce by Wells was often commercialized. Here Wells used an earlier linocut entitled “Looking Upward” commission as art of a commercial art Figure 20. Book Jacket for Negro Wage Earner, 1930 by Lorenzo J. Greene and Carter G. Woodson’s publication 22 Below Wells depicts in another linocut the African American worker in industry. This print executed in 1929 shows the workers active and integrated into the industry in the North. The struggles of the workers moving from the South and to the Northern states were significant to the increasing labor required in the North. Unfortunately, this print made in 1929 does not foretell the almost immediate crash of the stock markets and the difficult labor years to come during the depression. Figure 21. Builders, Linocut by James L. Wells, 1929. This industrial work scene (Figure 21) with workers producing and assembling products. In the background the smokestacks belching forth with black smoke this urban scene contrasts with the rural labor scene below. Figure 22. The Plowman by Wilmer Jennings, wood engraving, 1948. 23 Wilmer Jennings’ “Plowman”23 is a glimpse of the African American sharecropper on the farm (figure 22). In this 1948 relief print the black farmer is alone in this expansive field close to nature, but doing the backbreaking labor of plowing from sunup until sundown. Jennings’ composition presents the man, plow and mule as a unified machine preparing the furrows of the field for the planting season. The lines converging to the horizon lends the composition a very dramatic quality. We perceive a sense of oneness of the plowman in his labor within this idyllic agricultural environment. However, the beauty of the environment hides the horrors of frequent lynching and the cheating of the sharecroppers on the sale of their crops-causing a virtual extension of slavery. It is from this oppressive environment in the Southern United States that many of the African American males migrated from to the Northern United States. Figure 23. Surface Mining, Dox Thrash, n.d. African American mine workers are shown in Dox Thrash’s print titled “Surface Mining,”24 (n.d.). He illustrates two men toiling and pulling at a surface load. Thrash shows the entire body in work positions actively working. However, he shows no facial characteristics, these two ambiguously identified workers are presented similarly to the everyman plowman of the previous Wilmer Jennings print. Although Dox Thrash was very interested in the integrity of individual African American images. He, nevertheless, represents the black workers, in this print, with very generalised human forms. 24 Figure 24. Played-Out by Dox Thrash, n.d. Dox Thrash attacked the debilitating and hard labor work of the African American male. In many circumstances working two jobs. He was concerned by the severity and fatigue caused by the physically intense labor. In most instances African American males were given the most physically difficult and dangerous jobs in American industry. The etching/aquatint “Played-Out”,25 (n.d.), is an illustration of the effects of the backbreaking labor of dead-end day jobs filled by African American males. Working multiples jobs to make ends meet. At the end at the day, night or week the laborer was literally worked to a “living death.” Many African American male workers attempting to work in new industries in the North and South – and many of those workers in need of jobs traditionally not available to African American workers faced another life threatening challenge. This challenge, lynching, was more despicable than being the first to be laid off in the industrial downturn. Many became, during the late 19th and early 20th century, lynch mob victims. These African American males in their attempts to provide for their wives and children were exposed to intense white resentment and hate. Many were lynched due to their participation in labor protests, and buying boycotts. They actively fought and organized to remove themselves from the feudal slavery that sharecropping came to be-a reconstruction of the plantation system. Many died in horrible fashions for exercising their normal civil rights as American citizens. Elizabeth Catlett, an artist who participated in many boycotts, organized activities relative to the rights of 25 workers and agitated for equal pay for equal work, has poignantly presented a print of the lynch mob victim. Figure 25. “…and a very special care for our loved ones by Elizabeth Catlett,” 1946. Entitled “…and a very special care for our loved ones.”26 Catlett shows the African American male worker (Figure 25), after he was cut down from the hanging tree, sprawled on the ground with the lynch rope still tied around his neck. We see the trousers legs and shoes of the lynch mob in the upper background. Catlett does not show the mob members’ faces. The absence of the lynch mob faces provides anonymity. The lynch mob perceives this anonymity to be a significant part of their power. The anonymous mob’s ultimate objective is to strike fear into minds of all African American male in order to limit black male thinking to the fearsome and limited shadows of their existence-to be forever in “psychological servitude.” The mob attempts through this to leave a universal lesson of fear in the black male psychic -if you agitate for fair pay, equal rights and justice this horrific form of death will be visited upon you. Frantz Fanon talked about the problems of freedom received as a gift without the shedding of blood by the colonized and the enslaved. 27 The shipyard worker perceives his freedom as being given or allowed as opposed to being earned through the shedding of blood. He is, therefore, unable to exercise in the psychological and physical sense all of his being-the whole self. He still perceives a self -lack. 26 Comparatively, “The Hunted Slave”28 has made the decision to shed blood in the struggle for freedom, to protect his wife and, therefore, to shed blood to sacrifice his life if necessary in the killing of the dogs-a visual metaphor for the slave masters and slave hunters. This is the moment of earned freedom-this is the moment described by Fanon. 27 Red Eye's Hall, Lithograph 1935, by Meyer Wolf (1897-1985) Reading and interpreting prints of black male subjects requires a rereading of the cultural history. In this study, I examine how racial identity and masculinity was posited and evoked in the imagery. I would argue that the artists included in this discussion attempted to create a counter-image that conveyed their sense of history, which celebrated, idealized and visually documented their view of the recorded events. It is intended that this essay motivate other artists to do as Fanon has advised, to reject negative visual taxonomies in order that African Americans might choose to control the visual representation of self. The printmakers also interpreted the ideals of the abolitionists and race leaders. They created transformed images that projected African 28 American men in various social constructions. This was a radical notion at the time, when you consider the long violent history of African Americans. These images of African American males in prints represent black men who go to war, contribute to the labor force, achieve through education. Most importantly they represent the willingness to resist and rebel in the interest of the race. These prints compels us to begin the transformation of the negative racial myths-to transcends the “Darktown Series” of the 19th Century. These images did much more than record the presence of black men in America, they became a projection of empowerment as African Americans sought to shape and control their image. While history books have tended to overlook and ignore most of this imagery, I found abundant evidence of it in the collections here at the Schomburg Center and at the Library of Congress. Scholars and artists alike are reinterpreting, historicizing, and creating works and alternative readings in visual culture and critical race theory. My aim is to demonstrate and decode the prints sometimes ‘hidden’ references to the political, ideological and aesthetic interests of the artist and subject, and reveal the parallels between visual representations of and written discourse on the black subject. Exploring representations through text and image provides us with a new paradigm in which to explore the racial subtext and the significance of the image in the study of history. These works pull the more humane and heroic images of African American males Out of the Shadows. 1 Ellwood Parry, The Image of the Indian and the Black Man in American Art: 1590-1900, New York: George Braziller, 1974: p. xiii. 2 Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks. Trans. Charles Lam Markmann, New York: Grove Press, 1967(Peau noire, masques blancs. Paris: Editions de Seuil, 1952.) 3 “The Hunted Slave,” a 1865 reproductive engraving by C.G. Lewis from an 1861 painting by Richard Ansdell. The Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University, Washington, DC. 4 Frederick Douglas’ West India Speech given during his appointment as ConsulGovernor to Haiti, 1889-91. 5 Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, Trans. Constance Farrington. New York: Grove Press, 1963. (Les Damnes de la terre. Paris: Francois Maspero, 1961). p. 61. 6 Colin A. Palmer, Passageways: An Interpretive History of Black America, Volume I: 1619-1863, Orlando, FL: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1998, p. 238. 7 Smith, Jessie Carney, Black First, Detroit: Visible Ink Press, 1994, p. 74. 29 8 Ibid, p.75 Genovese, Eugene D., Roll Jordan Roll:The World that Slaves Made, New York: Pantheon Books, 1974, p. 592. 10 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part3/36484.html 11 Kaplan, Sidney and Emma Kaplan, The Black Prescence in the Era of the American Revolution. Amherst: University of Massachussetts Press, 1989, Rev. Ed., p.165 12 ibid, p. 161. 13 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part3/3narr5html 14 Genovese, Eugene, 1974, p. 592-3. 15 Brown, Henry box with Charles Stearns, The Narrative of Henry Box Brown, Boston: Brown and Stearns, 1849, p. 38 16 ibid, p. 55. 17 Gnovese, Eugene, 1974, p.657. 18 Reba and Dave Williams, “Theme Images” Alone in a Crowd: Prints from the 1930s-40s by African-American Artists. From the collection of Reba and Dave Williams. 19 Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks. Trans. Charles Lam Markmann, New York: Grove Press, 1967(Peau noire, masques blancs. Paris: Editions de Seuil, 1952.) p. 112. 20 Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks. 21 James Lesene Wells, “Negro Worker”, 1940, lithograph. The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 22 James Lesene Wells, “Looking Upward”, n.d., relief print, The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 23 Wilmer Jennings, “Plowman”, 1948, wood engraving, The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 24 Dox Thrash, “Surface Mining”, n.d., etching, The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 25 Dox Thrash, “Played-Out”, etching/aquatint, The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 26 Elizabeth Catlett, “…and a very special care for our loved ones”, 1946, From the relief print series on Black Women created with the supported of a Rosenwald grant. The Permanent Collection of the Howard University Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. 27 Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth , p.___. 28 ibid 9 30