NEW YORK, NY.- The New Museum will present a major survey of works by Emory Douglas made while Douglas was the Revolutionary Artist of the Black Panther Party and subsequently, its Minister of Culture. Emory Douglas: Black Panther will be on view in the second floor gallery from July 22 through October 18, 2009. Douglas created the overall design of the Black Panther, the Partys weekly newspaper, and oversaw its layout and production from 1967 until it ceased publication in 1979. Douglas created a straightforward graphic style and a vocabulary of images that would become synonymous with the Party and the issues it fought for. Selected by the Los Angeles artist Sam Durant, whose work often deals with political and cultural subjects in American history, the exhibition includes more than 155 posters, newspapers, and prints dating from 1966 to 1977, as well as a small-scale mural that reprises one of Douglass vintage images.
In Durants opinion, this exhibition is not only a retrospective of Douglass artistic achievement; it is a primer on how art can encourage political consciousness and function within an activist context. That this graphically alive, politically focused visual art is also completely relevant to contemporary art practices is demonstrated by its influence on the work of artist Rigo 23, who will execute the mural in Douglass show in addition to his own site-specific installation which will be simultaneously on view in the New Museums Shaft Gallery. Douglas will give an artist talk, introduced by Rigo 23, on July 23 at 7 p.m. in the New Museum theater.
Sam Durant met Emory Douglas in 2002, and began creating a book of Douglass work, which resulted in a monograph published in 2007. The same year Durant curated Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. The exhibition at the New Museum is organized by Laura Hoptman, Kraus Family Senior Curator, with Amy Mackie, Curatorial Assistant.
Between 1966 and 1980, the Black Panther Party built an international organization of over 5,000 members. With chapters in cities across the country, after 1968, the Partys focus expanded from self-defense to community service and social-welfare programs including, free breakfasts for children, free health clinics, and charter schools, among others. The Party also built coalitions with churches, labor unions, and a variety of multiethnic political groups, and by 1970 was fielding candidates for city, state, and national offices. Douglass work gave visual form to many aspects of this extraordinary history.
At its height, the Black Panther had a circulation of 400,000. Early examples of Douglass lively and incendiary graphic compositions sought to inspire the African-American community with representations of proud and defiant black men and women and trademark ironic caricatures of racist abusers of power. The pig, which became the predominant avatar for authority, is among the best known of Douglass motifs, along with the stalking panther and the clenched black fist. Later works feature representations of community pride, economic development, and the positive results of the Partys many social programs. Douglas also produced portrait posters that portrayed many of the most important public figures of the 1960s, including Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, Amiri Baraka, and Malcolm X. While Douglass work was focused on the struggle for African-American civil rights, it also took as its subject anti-colonial struggles around the world. By the early 70s, many of Douglass works expressed the Black Panther Partys solidarity with analogous international groups dedicated to political and social reform, and exhibited formal affinities to protest graphics produced at the time in Cuba, the Peoples Republic of China, North Vietnam, and Africa.
Douglass work established an iconic visual style that communicated the Black Panther Partys commitment to activism and social change and created a powerful identifiable aesthetic that helped mobilize its constituency and sympathizers. It can also be seen as part of a tradition of activist art-making in the mid-twentieth century, including the expressionistic realism of Mexican muralists like Diego Rivera, the sculptures and prints of African-American artist Elizabeth Catlett, and the prints of German artist Käthe Kollwitz (18671945). In his use of photomontage, as well as his method of distributionthrough newspapers and postersDouglass work can also be related to the anti-fascist photomontages of the German artist John Heartfield, whose powerful images served as covers for underground, anti-government publications throughout the Nazi regime. Like Douglas, these artists were dedicated activists whose visual art production cannot be disassociated from their political struggle, and like him, they chose delivery systemsfrom murals and monuments to prints, posters, and publicationsthat were easily distributable and unambiguously public.
Emory Douglas was born in 1943 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and has been a resident of the Bay Area in California, since 1951. He held the title of Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party, a part of the national leadership, from 1967 until the party disbanded in the early 1980s. During the Partys active years he served as the art director overseeing the design and layout of the Black Panther, the Partys weekly newspaper. Douglas was trained as a commercial artist at City College of San Francisco and has been the subject of several solo exhibitions. His work has also been in numerous exhibitions about the history of the Black Panther Party, including shows at the Arts & Culture Conference of the Black Panther Party in Atlanta, GA in 2008 and The Black Panther Rank and File at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco in 2006. Most recently his work was the subject of a solo exhibition at Urbis, Manchester, UK in 200809. In 2007, artist Sam Durant curated a solo exhibition of Douglass work at the MOCA Pacific Design Center in Los Angeles. Douglass work has also been presented at the 2008 Biennale of Sydney, Australia; the African American Art & Cultural Complex, San Francisco; Richmond Art Center, VA; and the Station Museum of Contemporary Art, Houston.