LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist , the first retrospective of the artist to travel to the West Coast. Comprising approximately 45 paintings, Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist is a full-scale survey of one of the most important Harlem Renaissance artists active outside of New York City. The exhibition surveys Motleys entire careerincluding periods the artist spent in Chicago, Paris, and Mexicoand presents the painters visual examination of African American culture during the Jazz Age, a time when society and attitudes were shifting.
"This is a rare opportunity for Los Angeles audiences to see the lively and incisive paintings of Archibald Motley," said Michael Govan, LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director. "Many of these paintings belong to private collections, or have never traveled to Los Angeles before. We are glad to present them to the public in this exhibition."
Centered in the Harlem district of New York City in the 20s and 30s, the Harlem Renaissance led to an increasing appreciation of arts, literature, theater, and music by African American artists, said Ilene Susan Fort, senior curator and the Gail and John Liebes Curator of American Art at LACMA. Capturing the bold color and shadowy, syncopated rhythm of nightlife during the Jazz Age, Motley painted crowded urban street views and indoor scenes of nightclubs, bars, and other social gatherings that best characterized the newly emerging, modern and urbane black community.
Archibald Motley opened at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University (January 30 May 11, 2014) and traveled to the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas (June 14September 7, 2014). Following its presentation at LACMA, the exhibition will travel to the Chicago Cultural Center (March 6August 31, 2015) and conclude its tour at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York (fall 2015).
Archibald Motley is arranged in loose chronological order and is broadly organized into four parts: portraits; Chicagos street and night scenes; time in Paris; and satiric commentary on race. The exhibition also examines Motleys involvement with the Works Progress Administrations Federal Art Projects of the New Deal and his time spent in Mexico in later years.
Motleys initial success came from his early portraits. In contrast to prevailing racial stereotypes at the time, his African American sitters exude calm, a sense of contemplation, outer and inner beauty, and embody a modern understanding of anatomical form and color. A frequent subject with the artist is a beautiful young woman of mixed racial ancestry, a recurring figure in Harlem Renaissance that, as visualized by Motley, conjures a Jazz Age muse. Liberated from Victorian- era morality, this representative of the New Womanwith her bobbed, waved hair and unrestrictive clothingis an object of emulation, desire, and speculation.
The burgeoning African American population of Chicago in the 1920s and 1930s reflected a myriad of socioeconomic groups and art and leisure interests. During this time, Motley also spent a year in Paris, where he captured the essence of bohemian life, filling his later southside scenes with a sense of rhythm and music. Driven by highly developed transportation networks and mass-media outlets, the machines of commerce and culture created a vibrant, consumer- oriented metropolis and intellectual center. Motley studied Chicagos community intently, painting with equal humor and affection the citys black elites; its rustic, recently arrived migrants from the South; and its unseemly lowlifes.
By 1930, migrants from the Mississippi Delta and the Cotton Belt had dramatically transformed the neighborhoods just south of Chicagos main business district popularly known as Bronzeville. Motley responded to the effects of the citys changing demographics in his art. Although he lived in Chicagos Englewood, a predominantly European-immigrant neighborhood, he spent his youth and adult years socializing in Bronzeville, and it would become his primary artistic inspiration.
In the 1950s, Archibald Motley went on to create numerous canvases in Mexico in the 1950s while visiting his nephew, the writer Willard F. Motley. These chromatically dissonant yet emotionally dispassionate paintings are, in one sense, part of Motleys long artistic trajectory, but they also parallel Willards own incisive writings about Mexicos growing tourist industry. For the remainder of Motleys career, he would continue to work in this caliente (or hot) mode, letting neon colors and the strange effects of artificial light dominate the pictures narrative.
Archibald John Motley, Jr. was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1891. During the first half of the 20th century, he lived and worked in a predominately white neighborhood on Chicagos southwest side. In 1929 Motley won a Guggenheim Fellowship, which funded a year of study in France, during which time he created Blues , a colorful rhythm-inflected painting of Jazz Age Paris, in addition to several canvases that vividly capture the pulse and tempo of la vie bohème. Similar in spirit to his Chicago paintings, these Parisian canvases depict an African diaspora in Pariss meandering streets and congested cabarets.
In the 1950s, Motley made several lengthy visits to Mexico, where he created vivid depictions of life and landscapes. He died in Chicago in 1981.