Romare Bearden's 'The Block' and Related Drawings at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Written by Lisa Messinger Friday, 24 June 2011 21:10
NEW YORK, NY.- Romare Bearden's vibrant mural-size tableau The Block (1971) and related sketches and photographs will be featured at The Metropolitan Museum of Art beginning January 15, 2010, in a small installation of works from the collection. The Block, an ambitious 18-foot-long collage, celebrates the Harlem neighborhood in New York City that nurtured and inspired so much of the artist's life and work. On view through Spring, 2010.
Romare Bearden (1911–1988) is best known for the colorful cut-paper
collages that he began making in the 1960s. Elaborate works such as The Block
(1971) elevated this genre to a major art form through its unusual materials,
expressionist color, abstracted forms, flattened shapes and spaces, and shifts
in perspective and scale—all the while maintaining focus on the human narrative
being told within a single city block.
Bearden described The Block in 1971: "…I was intrigued by the series of houses I could see from [the] windows. Their colors, their forms, and the lives they contained within their walls fascinated me. When I sketched this block, I was looking at a particular street [Lenox Avenue between 132nd and 133rd streets], but as I translated it into visual form it became something else. I lost the literalness and moved into where my imagination took me." Bearden's collage technique—a mixture of bold colors, large and small shapes, and diverse patterns—captures the energy of city life.
On view to the public for the first time are 11 of Bearden's preliminary sketches for The Block, which reveal his close attention to architectural detail and human gesture. Also on display are two photographs of Lenox Avenue, taken in about 1971 by Bearden's friend, the writer Albert Murray. The drawings and photographs were part of the 2005 bequest of William S. Lieberman (1923–2005), former chairman of the Metropolitan's Department of Modern Art.
In 1969, Bearden published an article in which he wrote of "painting the life of my people as I know it—as passionately and dispassionately as Brueghel painted the life of the Flemish people of his day." Expansive in scale, narrative detail, and conception, The Block celebrates a Harlem neighborhood in a dynamic, affirmative spirit. The collage is organized in six panels that together measure eighteen feet. Dense incident drawn from an almost journalistic reporting of everyday activity is coupled with imagery from an inner world of fantasy and pure imagination. The reportorial and the fantastic are conjoined here in a scene emblematic of the African-American experience—at epic scale.
Romare Bearden's The Block is organized by Lisa Messinger, Associate Curator in the Museum's Department of Nineteenth-Century, Modern, and Contemporary Art.
Visit The Metropolitan Museum of Art at : http://www.metmuseum.org/
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