NEW YORK, NY.- Jacob Lawrence: Builders features paintings, drawings, and prints that communicate the artists belief in the possibility of building a better world through skill, ingenuity, hard work, and collaboration. For the last three decades of his life, Lawrence (1917-2000) consistently pursued the Builders theme, creating a sequence of vibrant modernist images that highlight his pervasive humanist vision.
The Builders concept first appeared in Lawrences work in the mid-1940s, but assumed greater importance in the late 1960s and soon became a major focus. His subjects were carpenters, cabinetmakers, bricklayers, and construction workers in a variety of workaday and family situations. Overall, they came to symbolize some of his larger ideas about American culture, hope, persistence, and the shared responsibility for transforming society, inspired, as he once said, by his own observations of the human condition.
As much as the Builders works embody these ideals, they are also about Lawrences commitment to modernism. Bold, saturated colors, and solid, unmodulated shapes dominate the compositions. Foregrounds and backgrounds merge into the flatness of the picture plane, while the colors of the figures faces, arms, and clothing often dissolve into similar colors in the spaces that surround them. Other figures are silhouettes with no recognizable features, ciphers that create further visual ambiguity.
Architecture, too, is reduced to basic elements, sometimes a series of arches that define windows and doorways or planes of color for walls and floors. Diagonals of planks, worktables, and window sills suggest depth, while often also referencing perspective in early Renaissance painting, which Lawrence credited as an important influence from the time that he first saw works by Giotto and other Italian masters in the Metropolitan Museum of Art when he was a young, aspiring artist. The Builders works, then, speak to Lawrences past and present, eloquent statements of the importance of community rendered through his distinctively modernist viewpoint.
The paintings, drawings, and prints in the exhibition were created following Lawrences move to Seattle to accept a tenured position at the University of Washington in 1971. After living in New York City for forty years, it was a significant change for him and his wife, fellow artist Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence. Teaching full time allowed him to bring new focus to his art, and also brought a welcome sense of financial security. He considered the move a retreat
not in the sense of defeat, but of renewal.
Away from Harlem and the urban environment that he had grown up in, Lawrence increasingly pursued more symbolic and universal subjects that were less overtly grounded in contemporary social issues than much of his earlier art. At the same time, the new work was also the result of his continued growth as an artist. As he explained in 1974, it was a broadening of imagery, an expansion of my humanist concept.
like most artists, Im expanding, probing, constantly seeking new symbolsalways within the humanist context.