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Archibald Motley

Archibald John Motley, Jr. (October 7, 1891 – January 16, 1981),[1] was an American visual artist. Motley is most famous for his colorful chronicling of the African-American experience in Chicago during the 1920s and 1930s, and is considered one of the major contributors to the Harlem Renaissance, or the New Negro Movement, a time in which African-American art reached new heights not just in New York but across America—its local expression is referred to as the Chicago Black Renaissance. He studied painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago during the 1910s, graduating in 1918.

Archibald John Motley, Jr.
Self Portrait (1920)
Born(1891-10-07)October 7, 1891
DiedJanuary 16, 1981(1981-01-16) (aged 89)
EducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago
Known forPainting
MovementHarlem Renaissance, Chicago Black Renaissance

The New Negro Movement marked a period of renewed, flourishing black psyche. There was a newfound appreciation of black artistic and aesthetic culture. Consequently, many black artists felt a moral obligation to create works that would perpetuate a positive representation of black people. During this time, Alain Locke coined the idea of the "New Negro", which was focused on creating progressive and uplifting images of blacks within society.[2] The synthesis of black representation and visual culture drove the basis of Motley's work as "a means of affirming racial respect and race pride."[3] His use of color and notable fixation on skin-tone, demonstrated his artistic portrayal of blackness as being multidimensional. Motley himself was of mixed race, and often felt unsettled about his own racial identity. Thus, his art often demonstrated the complexities and multifaceted nature of black culture and life.

Early life and education edit

 
Archibald Motley Self Portrait

Unlike many other Harlem Renaissance artists, Archibald Motley, Jr., never lived in Harlem. He was born in New Orleans, Louisiana to Mary Huff Motley and Archibald John Motley Senior. His mother was a school teacher until she married. The family remained in New Orleans until 1894 when they moved to Chicago, where his father took a job as a Pullman car porter.[4] As a boy growing up on Chicago's south side, Motley had many jobs, and when he was nine years old his father's hospitalization for six months required that Motley help support the family.[5]

When Motley was a child, his maternal grandmother lived with the family. She had been a slave after having been taken from British East Africa. She shared her stories about slavery with the family, and the young Archibald listened attentively. He describes his grandmother's surprisingly positive recollections of her life as a slave in his oral history on file with the Smithsonian Archive of American Art.[5]

During World War I, he accompanied his father on many railroad trips that took him all across the country, to destinations including San Francisco, Los Angeles, Hoboken, Atlanta and Philadelphia. It was this exposure to life outside Chicago that led to Motley's encounters with race prejudice in many forms. In his oral history interview with Dennis Barrie working for the Smithsonian Archive of American Art, Motley related this encounter with a streetcar conductor in Atlanta, Georgia:

I wasn't supposed to go to the front. So I was reading the paper and walking along, after a while I found myself in the front of the car. The conductor was in the back and he yelled, "Come back here you so-and-so" using very vile language, "you come back here. You must be one of those smart'uns from up in Chicago or New York or somewhere." It just came to me then and I felt like a fool. I was never white in my life but I think I turned white. I just stood there and held the newspaper down and looked at him. I walked back there. Then he got so nasty, he began to curse me out and call me all kinds of names using very degrading language. I just couldn't take it. And he made me very, very angry. I used to have quite a temper.[5]

Motley spent the majority of his life in Chicago, where he was a contemporary of fellow Chicago artists Eldzier Cortor and Gus Nall. He lived in a predominantly white neighborhood, and attended majority-white primary and secondary schools.[2] He graduated from Englewood Technical Prep Academy in Chicago.[6] He was offered a scholarship to study architecture by one of his father's friends, which he turned down in order to study art.[7] He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago,[6] where he received classical training, but his modernist-realist works were out of step with the school's then-conservative bent. During his time at the Art Institute, Motley was mentored by painters Karl Buehr and John W. Norton,[6] and he did well enough to prompt his father's friend to pay his tuition. While he was a student, in 1913, other students at the Institute "rioted" against the modernism on display at the Armory Show (a collection of the best new modern art).[8] Motley graduated in 1918 but kept his modern, jazz-influenced paintings secret for some years thereafter.[9]

As a result of his training in the western portrait tradition, Motley understood nuances of phrenology and physiognomy that went along with the aesthetics. He used these visual cues as a way to portray (black) subjects more positively. For example, in Motley's "self-portrait," he painted himself in a way that aligns with many of these physical pseudosciences. The slightly squinted eyes and tapered fingers are all subtle indicators of insight, intelligence, and refinement.[2]

Foreign study and inspirations edit

In 1927 he applied for a Guggenheim Fellowship and was denied, but he reapplied and won the fellowship in 1929. He studied in France for a year, and chose not to extend his fellowship another six months. While many contemporary artists looked back to Africa for inspiration, Motley was inspired by the great Renaissance masters whose work was displayed at the Louvre.[5] He found in the artwork there a formal sophistication and maturity that could give depth to his own work, particularly in the Dutch painters and the genre paintings of Delacroix, Hals, and Rembrandt. Motley's portraits take the conventions of the Western tradition and update them—allowing for black bodies, specifically black female bodies, a space in a history that had traditionally excluded them. He felt that portraits in particular exposed a certain transparency of truth of the internal self.[2] Thus, he would focus on the complexity of the individual in order to break from popularized caricatural stereotypes of blacks such as the "darky," "pickaninny," "mammy," etc.[2] Motley understood the power of the individual, and the ways in which portraits could embody a sort of palpable machine that could break this homogeneity. He took advantage of his westernized educational background in order to harness certain visual aesthetics that were rarely associated with blacks. Thus, he would use his knowledge as a tool for individual expression in order to create art that was meaningful aesthetically and socially to a broader American audience.[2] By acquiring these skills, Motley was able to break the barrier of white-world aesthetics. The use of this acquired visual language would allow his work to act as a vehicle for racial empowerment and social progress.

Career edit

In the beginning of his career as an artist, Motley intended to solely pursue portrait painting.[2] After graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1918, he decided that he would focus his art on black subjects and themes, ultimately as an effort to relieve racial tensions.[10] In 1919, Chicago's south side race riots rendered his family housebound for over six days. In the midst of this heightened racial tension, Motley was very aware of the clear boundaries and consequences that came along with race. He understood that he had certain educational and socioeconomic privileges, and thus, he made it his goal to use these advantages to uplift the black community.

Motley experienced success early in his career; in 1927 his piece Mending Socks was voted the most popular painting at the Newark Museum in New Jersey.[11] He was awarded the Harmon Foundation award in 1928, and then became the first African American to have a one-man exhibit in New York City. He sold 22 out of the 26 exhibited paintings.[5] Motley would go on to become the first black artist to have a portrait of a black subject displayed at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Most of his popular portraiture was created during the mid 1920s. However, there was an evident artistic shift that occurred particularly in the 1930s. Motley strayed from the western artistic aesthetic, and began to portray more urban black settings with a very non-traditional style. By breaking from the conceptualized structure of westernized portraiture, he began to depict what was essentially a reflection of an authentic black community. Ultimately, his portraiture was essential to his career in that it demonstrated the roots of his adopted educational ideals and privileges, which essentially gave him the template to be able to progress as an artist and aesthetic social advocate.

During the 1930s, Motley was employed by the federal Works Progress Administration to depict scenes from African-American history in a series of murals, some of which can be found at Nichols Middle School in Evanston, Illinois. After his wife's death in 1948 and difficult financial times, Motley was forced to seek work painting shower curtains for the Styletone Corporation. In the 1950s, he made several visits to Mexico and began painting Mexican life and landscapes.[12]

Skin tone and identity edit

 
NARA black-and-white photograph of "Getting Religion" painting by Motley (original painting in color)

Motley's family lived in a quiet neighborhood on Chicago's south side in an environment that was racially tolerant. In his youth, Motley did not spend much time around other Black people. It was this disconnection with the African-American community around him that established Motley as an outsider. Motley himself was light skinned and of mixed racial makeup, being African, Native American and European. Unable to fully associate with either Black nor white, Motley wrestled all his life with his own racial identity.

Although Motley reinforces the association of higher social standing with "whiteness" or American determinates of beauty, he also exposes the diversity within the race as a whole. Motley's work made it much harder for viewers to categorize a person as strictly Black or white. He showed the nuances and variability that exists within a race, making it harder to enforce a strict racial ideology.

Motley used portraiture "as a way of getting to know his own people".[2] He realized that in American society, different statuses were attributed to each gradation of skin tone. Motley portrayed skin color and physical features as belonging to a spectrum. He used distinctions in skin color and physical features to give meaning to each shade of African American.

In the 1920s and 1930s, during the New Negro Movement, Motley dedicated a series of portraits to types of Negroes. He focused mostly on women of mixed racial ancestry, and did numerous portraits documenting women of varying African-blood quantities ("octoroon," "quadroon," "mulatto"). In titling his pieces, Motley used these antebellum creole classifications ("mulatto," "octoroon," etc.) in order to show the social implications of the "one drop rule," and the dynamics of what it means to be Black. He would expose these different "negro types" as a way to counter the fallacy of labeling all Black people as a generalized people. These direct visual reflections of status represented the broader social construction of Blackness, and its impact on Black relations. By asserting the individuality of African Americans in portraiture, Motley essentially demonstrated Blackness as being "worthy of formal portrayal."[10] These portraits celebrate skin tone as something diverse, inclusive, and pluralistic.[13] They also demonstrate an understanding that these categorizations become synonymous with public identity and influence one's opportunities in life.[14] It is often difficult if not impossible to tell what kind of racial mixture the subject has without referring to the title. These physical markers of Blackness, then, are unstable and unreliable, and Motley exposed that difference.

 
A painting by Motley with very bright colors

Motley spoke to a wide audience of both whites and Blacks in his portraits, aiming to educate them on the politics of skin tone, if in different ways. He hoped to prove to Black people through art that their own racial identity was something to be appreciated. For white audiences he hoped to bring an end to Black stereotypes and racism by displaying the beauty and achievements of African Americans. By displaying the richness and cultural variety of African Americans, the appeal of Motley's work was extended to a wide audience. Many were captivated by his portraiture because it contradicted stereotyped images, and instead displayed the "contemporary black experience."[10] This is consistent with Motley's aims of portraying an absolutely accurate and transparent representation of African Americans; his commitment to differentiating between skin types shows his meticulous efforts to specify even the slightest differences between individuals. In an interview with the Smithsonian Institution, Motley explained his motives and the difficulty behind painting the different skin tones of African Americans:

They're not all the same color, they're not all black, they're not all, as they used to say years ago, high yellow, they're not all brown. I try to give each one of them character as individuals. And that's hard to do when you have so many figures to do, putting them all together and still have them have their characteristics. (Motley, 1978)

By painting the differences in their skin tones, Motley is also attempting to bring out the differences in personality of his subjects. It could be interpreted that through this differentiating, Motley is asking white viewers not to lump all African Americans into the same category or stereotype, but to get to know each of them as individuals before making any judgments.[15] In this way, his work used colorism and class as central mechanisms to subvert stereotypes.[16] By harnessing the power of the individual, his work engendered positive propaganda that would incorporate "black participation in a larger national culture."[16] Motley's work pushed the ideal of the multifariousness of Blackness in a way that was widely aesthetically communicable and popular. In the end, this would instill a sense of personhood and individuality for Blacks through the vehicle of visuality.

Many whites wouldn't give Motley commissions to paint their portraits, yet the majority of his collectors were white.[10] He was able to expose a part of the Black community that was often not seen by whites, and thus, through aesthetics, broaden the scope of the authentic Black experience.

During this time, Alain Locke coined the idea of the "New Negro," which was very focused on creating progressive and uplifting images of Blacks within society. In addition, many magazines such as the Chicago Defender, The Crisis, and Opportunity all aligned with prevalent issues of Black representation.[2] Aesthetics had a powerful influence in expanding the definitions of race. Consequently, many were encouraged to take an artistic approach in the context of social progress. In The Crisis, Carl Van Vechten wrote, "What are negroes when they are continually painted at their worst and judged by the public as they are painted ... preventing white artists from knowing any other types (of Black people) and preventing Black artists from daring to paint them ..."[2] Motley would use portraiture as a vehicle for positive propaganda by creating visual representations of Black diversity and humanity. He would break down the dichotomy between Blackness and Americanness by demonstrating social progress through complex visual narratives.

Works and observation of jazz culture edit

 
NARA black-and-white photograph of "Black Belt," painting by Motley (original painting in color)

His night scenes and crowd scenes, heavily influenced by jazz culture, are perhaps his most popular and most prolific. He depicted a vivid, urban black culture that bore little resemblance to the conventional and marginalizing rustic images of black Southerners so familiar in popular culture.[17] It is important to note, however, that it was not his community he was representing—he was among the affluent and elite black community of Chicago. He married a white woman and lived in a white neighborhood, and was not a part of that urban experience in the same way his subjects were.

Bronzeville at Night edit

Source:[18]

In his paintings of jazz culture, Motley often depicted Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood, which offered a safe haven for blacks migrating from the South.[19] One of his most famous works showing the urban black community is Bronzeville at Night, showing African Americans as actively engaged, urban peoples who identify with the city streets. In the work, Motley provides a central image of the lively street scene and portrays the scene as a distant observer, capturing the many individual interactions but paying attention to the big picture at the same time.[20]

Like many of his other works, Motley's cross-section of Bronzeville lacks a central narrative. For example, a brooding man with his hands in his pockets gives a stern look. Behind the bus, a man throws his arms up ecstatically. In the center, a man exchanges words with a partner, his arm up and head titled as if to show that he is making a point. By displaying a balance between specificity and generalization, he allows "the viewer to identify with the figures and the places of the artist's compositions."[20]

Stomp edit

Source:[21]

In Stomp, Motley painted a busy cabaret scene which again documents the vivid urban black culture. The excitement in the painting is palpable: one can observe a woman in a white dress throwing her hands up to the sound of the music, a couple embracing—hand in hand—in the back of the cabaret, the lively pianist watching the dancers. Both black and white couples dance and hobnob with each other in the foreground. For example, on the right of the painting, an African-American man wearing a black tuxedo dances with a woman whom Motley gives a much lighter tone. By doing this, he hoped to counteract perceptions of segregation.

Critics of Motley point out that the facial features of his subjects are in the same manner as minstrel figures. But Motley had no intention to stereotype and hoped to use the racial imagery to increase "the appeal and accessibility of his crowds."[22] It opened up a more universal audience for his intentions to represent African-American progress and urban lifestyle.

The Octoroon Girl edit

Source:[23]

The Octoroon Girl features a woman who is one-eighth black. In the image a graceful young woman with dark hair, dark eyes and light skin sits on a sofa while leaning against a warm red wall. She wears a black velvet dress with red satin trim, a dark brown hat and a small gold chain with a pendant. In her right hand, she holds a pair of leather gloves. The woman stares directly at the viewer with a soft, but composed gaze. Her face is serene. Motley balances the painting with a picture frame and the rest of the couch on the left side of the painting. Her clothing and background all suggest that she is of higher class. The poised posture and direct gaze project confidence. The way in which her elongated hands grasp her gloves demonstrates her sense of style and elegance. Motley's use of physicality and objecthood in this portrait demonstrates conformity to white aesthetic ideals, and shows how these artistic aspects have very realistic historical implications.

Motley was "among the few artists of the 1920s who consistently depicted African Americans in a positive manner."[24] The Octoroon Girl is an example of this effort to put African-American women in a good light – or, perhaps, simply to make known the realities of middle class African-American life. Motley's presentation of the woman not only fulfilled his desire to celebrate accomplished blacks but also created an aesthetic role model to which those who desired an elite status might look up to. The Octoroon Girl was meant to be a symbol of social, racial, and economic progress.

In Motley's paintings, he made little distinction between octoroon women and white women, depicting octoroon women with material representations of status and European features. It appears that the message Motley is sending to his white audience is that even though the octoroon woman is part African American, she clearly does not fit the stereotype of being poor and uneducated. He requests that white viewers look beyond the genetic indicators of her race and see only the way she acts now—distinguished, poised and with dignity. In his attempt to deconstruct the stereotype, Motley has essentially removed all traces of the octoroon's race.

The Mulatress edit

In his portrait The Mulatress (1924), Motley features a "mulatto" sitter who is very poised and elegant in the way that "the octoroon girl" is. The sitter is strewn with jewelry, and sits in such a way that projects a certain chicness and relaxedness. She is portrayed as elegant, but a sharpness and tenseness are evident in her facial expression. Motley was ultimately aiming to portray the troubled and convoluted nature of the "tragic mulatto."[2] Motley himself identified with this sense of feeling caught in the middle of one's own identity. Thus, this portrait speaks to the social implications of racial identity by distinguishing the "mulatto" from the upper echelons of black society that was reserved for "octoroons."[2] In this way, Motley used portraiture in order to demonstrate the complexities of the impact of racial identity.

Motley used sharp angles and dark contrasts within the model's face to indicate that she was emotional or defiant. While this gave the subject more personality and depth, it can also be said the Motley played into the stereotype that black women are angry and vindictive. Many of the opposing messages that are present in Motley's works are attributed to his relatively high social standing which would create an element of bias even though Motley was also black. Still, Motley was one of the only artists of the time willing to paint African-American models with such precision and accuracy. He treated these portraits as a quasi-scientific study in the different gradients of race.

The distinction between the girl's couch and the mulatress' wooden chair also reveals the class distinctions that Motley associated with each of his subjects. In this series of portraits, Motley draws attention to the social distinctions of each subject.

Nightlife edit

Source:[25]

During this period, Motley developed a reusable and recognizable language in his artwork, which included contrasting light and dark colors, skewed perspectives, strong patterns and the dominance of a single hue. He also created a set of characters who appeared repeatedly in his paintings with distinctive postures, gestures, expressions and habits. These figures were often depicted standing very close together, if not touching or overlapping one another. Nightlife, in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago, depicts a bustling night club with people dancing in the background, sitting at tables on the right and drinking at a bar on the left.[26] The entire image is flushed with a burgundy light that emanates from the floor and walls, creating a warm, rich atmosphere for the club-goers. The rhythm of the music can be felt in the flailing arms of the dancers, who appear to be performing the popular Lindy hop. In contrast, the man in the bottom right corner sits and stares in a drunken stupor. Another man in the center and a woman towards the upper right corner also sit isolated and calm in the midst of the commotion of the club.

In an interview with the Smithsonian Institution, Motley explained this disapproval of racism he tries to dispel with Nightlife and other paintings:

And that's why I say that racism is the first thing that they have got to get out of their heads, forget about this damned racism, to hell with racism. ... That means nothing to an artist. We're all human beings. And the sooner that's forgotten and the sooner that you can come back to yourself and do the things that you want to do. (Motley 1978)

In this excerpt, Motley calls for the removal of racism from social norms. He goes on to say that especially for an artist, it shouldn't matter what color of skin someone has—everyone is equal. He suggests that once racism is erased, everyone can focus on his or her self and enjoy life. In Nightlife, the club patrons appear to have forgotten racism and are making the most of life by having a pleasurable night out listening and dancing to jazz music. As a result of the club-goers removal of racism from their thoughts, Motley can portray them so pleasantly with warm colors and inviting body language.[5]

Death edit

Motley died in Chicago on January 16, 1981.

Personal life edit

Motley married his high school sweetheart Edith Granzo in 1924, whose German immigrant parents were opposed to their interracial relationship and disowned her for her marriage.[1]

His nephew (raised as his brother), Willard Motley, was an acclaimed writer known for his 1947 novel Knock on Any Door. His daughter-in-law is Valerie Gerrard Browne.

Motley was Catholic.[citation needed]

Recognition and awards edit

  • Frank G. Logan prize for the painting "A Mulattress" (1925).[4]
  • Joseph N. Eisendrath Award from the Art Institute of Chicago for the painting "Syncopation" (1925).[4]
  • Recipient Guggenheim Fellowship to pursue his studies in Paris (1929–30).[4]
  • Harmon Foundation Award for outstanding contributions to the field of art (1928).[4]
  • Receives honorary doctorate from the School of the Art Institute (1980).[4]
  • Honored with nine other African-American artists by President Jimmy Carter at the White House (1980).[4]

Retrospective exhibition edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Theater/the Arts. The African American Registry. Archived from the original on May 5, 2015. Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Mooney, Amy (1999). "Representing Race: Disjunctures in the Work of Archibald Motley, Jr". Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies. 24 (2): 163–265. doi:10.2307/4112967. JSTOR 4112967.
  3. ^ Mooney, Ann M. (2004). Archibald J. Motley Jr. Petaluma, California: Pomegranate Communications, Inc. pp. v. ISBN 9780764928864.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Reich, Howard (March 20, 2015). "Some key moments in Archibald Motley's life and art". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Motley, Archibald, Jr. Oral History Interview with Archibald Motley. Interview by Dennis Barrie for the Smithsonian Archives of American Art.
  6. ^ a b c Georgiady, N., L. Romano, and R. Green, Archibald J. Motley: American Negro Artist. Franklin Publishers, Inc, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1969.
  7. ^ "Motley, Archibald Jr. 1891–1981", Encyclopedia.com.
  8. ^ Martinez, Andrew, "A Mixed Reception for Modernism: The 1913 Armory Show at the Art Institute of Chicago," The Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies, vol. 19, no. 1, 1993, p. 31.
  9. ^ Woodall, Elaine D. , "Looking Backward: Archibald J. Motley and the Art Institute of Chicago: 1914–1930," Chicago History: The Magazine of the Chicago Historical Society, Spring 1979, vol. VIII, no. 1, pp. 53–57.
  10. ^ a b c d Greenhouse, Wendy (1998). "An Early Portrait by Archibald Motley, Jr". American Art Journal. 29 (1/2): 97–102. doi:10.2307/1594621. JSTOR 1594621.
  11. ^ Robinson, Jontyle Theresa, and Charles Austin Page Jr., "Mending socks and tales of Africa," The Christian Science Monitor, October 15, 1987. Retrieved 2015-10-03 from www.csmonitor.com.
  12. ^ Archibald Motley Biography
  13. ^ Harris, Michael D. "Color Lines: Mapping Color Consciousness in the Art of Archibald Motley, Jr." Colored Pictures: Race and Visual Representation. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003.
  14. ^ De Souza, Pauline. "Black Awakening: Gender and Representation in the Harlem Renaissance." in Katy Deepwell (ed.), Women Artists and Modernism, Manchester University Press, 1998, pp. 55-69.
  15. ^ Oral history interview with Archibald Motley, 1978 Jan. 23-1979 Mar. 1 - Oral Histories | Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
  16. ^ a b Wolfskill, Phoebe (2009). "Caricature and the New Negro in the Work of Archibald Motley Jr. and Palmer Hayden". The Art Bulletin. 91 (3): 343–365. doi:10.1080/00043079.2009.10786158. S2CID 191463495.
  17. ^ Pilgrim, David. "The Mammy Caricature". The Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia. Big Rapids: Ferris State University, 2000.
  18. ^ "Bronzeville by Night, 1949 - Archibald Motley - WikiArt.org". www.wikiart.org. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  19. ^ Amy M. Mooney, Archibald J. Motley Jr. (2004), p. 86.
  20. ^ a b Amy M. Mooney, Archibald J. Motley Jr. (2004), p. 95.
  21. ^ "Stomp, 1927 - Archibald Motley - WikiArt.org". www.wikiart.org. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  22. ^ Amy M. Mooney, Archibald J. Motley Jr. (2004), p. 88.
  23. ^ "The Octoroon Girl, 1925 - Archibald Motley - WikiArt.org". www.wikiart.org. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  24. ^ Coleman, Floyd (1995). "Down-home and uptown: Archibald Motley, Jr., and the evolution of African-American art". American Heritage. 1 (46): 18.
  25. ^ "Nightlife, 1943 - Archibald Motley - WikiArt.org". www.wikiart.org. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  26. ^ Motley, Archibald John Jr. "Nightlife". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 2021-05-24.

Further reading edit

  • Powell, Richard (editor); Mooney, Amy M. (contributor) (February 10, 2014). Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist (Paperback ed.). Duke University Press Books. ISBN 978-0938989370. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)
  • Reich, Howard. "Chicago's Jazz Age still lives in Archibald Motley's art". Chicago Tribune. No. March 20, 2015. Retrieved May 26, 2015.
  • Robinson, Jontyle Theresa and Wendy Greenhouse, The Art of Archibald John Motley, Jr. Chicago: Chicago Historical Society, 1991.

External links edit

archibald, motley, archibald, john, motley, october, 1891, january, 1981, american, visual, artist, motley, most, famous, colorful, chronicling, african, american, experience, chicago, during, 1920s, 1930s, considered, major, contributors, harlem, renaissance,. Archibald John Motley Jr October 7 1891 January 16 1981 1 was an American visual artist Motley is most famous for his colorful chronicling of the African American experience in Chicago during the 1920s and 1930s and is considered one of the major contributors to the Harlem Renaissance or the New Negro Movement a time in which African American art reached new heights not just in New York but across America its local expression is referred to as the Chicago Black Renaissance He studied painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago during the 1910s graduating in 1918 Archibald John Motley Jr Self Portrait 1920 Born 1891 10 07 October 7 1891New Orleans Louisiana U S DiedJanuary 16 1981 1981 01 16 aged 89 Chicago Illinois U S EducationSchool of the Art Institute of ChicagoKnown forPaintingMovementHarlem Renaissance Chicago Black Renaissance The New Negro Movement marked a period of renewed flourishing black psyche There was a newfound appreciation of black artistic and aesthetic culture Consequently many black artists felt a moral obligation to create works that would perpetuate a positive representation of black people During this time Alain Locke coined the idea of the New Negro which was focused on creating progressive and uplifting images of blacks within society 2 The synthesis of black representation and visual culture drove the basis of Motley s work as a means of affirming racial respect and race pride 3 His use of color and notable fixation on skin tone demonstrated his artistic portrayal of blackness as being multidimensional Motley himself was of mixed race and often felt unsettled about his own racial identity Thus his art often demonstrated the complexities and multifaceted nature of black culture and life Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Foreign study and inspirations 2 Career 2 1 Skin tone and identity 2 2 Works and observation of jazz culture 2 2 1 Bronzeville at Night 2 2 2 Stomp 2 2 3 The Octoroon Girl 2 2 4 The Mulatress 2 2 5 Nightlife 3 Death 4 Personal life 5 Recognition and awards 6 Retrospective exhibition 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp Archibald Motley Self Portrait Unlike many other Harlem Renaissance artists Archibald Motley Jr never lived in Harlem He was born in New Orleans Louisiana to Mary Huff Motley and Archibald John Motley Senior His mother was a school teacher until she married The family remained in New Orleans until 1894 when they moved to Chicago where his father took a job as a Pullman car porter 4 As a boy growing up on Chicago s south side Motley had many jobs and when he was nine years old his father s hospitalization for six months required that Motley help support the family 5 When Motley was a child his maternal grandmother lived with the family She had been a slave after having been taken from British East Africa She shared her stories about slavery with the family and the young Archibald listened attentively He describes his grandmother s surprisingly positive recollections of her life as a slave in his oral history on file with the Smithsonian Archive of American Art 5 During World War I he accompanied his father on many railroad trips that took him all across the country to destinations including San Francisco Los Angeles Hoboken Atlanta and Philadelphia It was this exposure to life outside Chicago that led to Motley s encounters with race prejudice in many forms In his oral history interview with Dennis Barrie working for the Smithsonian Archive of American Art Motley related this encounter with a streetcar conductor in Atlanta Georgia I wasn t supposed to go to the front So I was reading the paper and walking along after a while I found myself in the front of the car The conductor was in the back and he yelled Come back here you so and so using very vile language you come back here You must be one of those smart uns from up in Chicago or New York or somewhere It just came to me then and I felt like a fool I was never white in my life but I think I turned white I just stood there and held the newspaper down and looked at him I walked back there Then he got so nasty he began to curse me out and call me all kinds of names using very degrading language I just couldn t take it And he made me very very angry I used to have quite a temper 5 Motley spent the majority of his life in Chicago where he was a contemporary of fellow Chicago artists Eldzier Cortor and Gus Nall He lived in a predominantly white neighborhood and attended majority white primary and secondary schools 2 He graduated from Englewood Technical Prep Academy in Chicago 6 He was offered a scholarship to study architecture by one of his father s friends which he turned down in order to study art 7 He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago 6 where he received classical training but his modernist realist works were out of step with the school s then conservative bent During his time at the Art Institute Motley was mentored by painters Karl Buehr and John W Norton 6 and he did well enough to prompt his father s friend to pay his tuition While he was a student in 1913 other students at the Institute rioted against the modernism on display at the Armory Show a collection of the best new modern art 8 Motley graduated in 1918 but kept his modern jazz influenced paintings secret for some years thereafter 9 As a result of his training in the western portrait tradition Motley understood nuances of phrenology and physiognomy that went along with the aesthetics He used these visual cues as a way to portray black subjects more positively For example in Motley s self portrait he painted himself in a way that aligns with many of these physical pseudosciences The slightly squinted eyes and tapered fingers are all subtle indicators of insight intelligence and refinement 2 Foreign study and inspirations edit In 1927 he applied for a Guggenheim Fellowship and was denied but he reapplied and won the fellowship in 1929 He studied in France for a year and chose not to extend his fellowship another six months While many contemporary artists looked back to Africa for inspiration Motley was inspired by the great Renaissance masters whose work was displayed at the Louvre 5 He found in the artwork there a formal sophistication and maturity that could give depth to his own work particularly in the Dutch painters and the genre paintings of Delacroix Hals and Rembrandt Motley s portraits take the conventions of the Western tradition and update them allowing for black bodies specifically black female bodies a space in a history that had traditionally excluded them He felt that portraits in particular exposed a certain transparency of truth of the internal self 2 Thus he would focus on the complexity of the individual in order to break from popularized caricatural stereotypes of blacks such as the darky pickaninny mammy etc 2 Motley understood the power of the individual and the ways in which portraits could embody a sort of palpable machine that could break this homogeneity He took advantage of his westernized educational background in order to harness certain visual aesthetics that were rarely associated with blacks Thus he would use his knowledge as a tool for individual expression in order to create art that was meaningful aesthetically and socially to a broader American audience 2 By acquiring these skills Motley was able to break the barrier of white world aesthetics The use of this acquired visual language would allow his work to act as a vehicle for racial empowerment and social progress Career editIn the beginning of his career as an artist Motley intended to solely pursue portrait painting 2 After graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1918 he decided that he would focus his art on black subjects and themes ultimately as an effort to relieve racial tensions 10 In 1919 Chicago s south side race riots rendered his family housebound for over six days In the midst of this heightened racial tension Motley was very aware of the clear boundaries and consequences that came along with race He understood that he had certain educational and socioeconomic privileges and thus he made it his goal to use these advantages to uplift the black community Motley experienced success early in his career in 1927 his piece Mending Socks was voted the most popular painting at the Newark Museum in New Jersey 11 He was awarded the Harmon Foundation award in 1928 and then became the first African American to have a one man exhibit in New York City He sold 22 out of the 26 exhibited paintings 5 Motley would go on to become the first black artist to have a portrait of a black subject displayed at the Art Institute of Chicago Most of his popular portraiture was created during the mid 1920s However there was an evident artistic shift that occurred particularly in the 1930s Motley strayed from the western artistic aesthetic and began to portray more urban black settings with a very non traditional style By breaking from the conceptualized structure of westernized portraiture he began to depict what was essentially a reflection of an authentic black community Ultimately his portraiture was essential to his career in that it demonstrated the roots of his adopted educational ideals and privileges which essentially gave him the template to be able to progress as an artist and aesthetic social advocate During the 1930s Motley was employed by the federal Works Progress Administration to depict scenes from African American history in a series of murals some of which can be found at Nichols Middle School in Evanston Illinois After his wife s death in 1948 and difficult financial times Motley was forced to seek work painting shower curtains for the Styletone Corporation In the 1950s he made several visits to Mexico and began painting Mexican life and landscapes 12 Skin tone and identity edit nbsp NARA black and white photograph of Getting Religion painting by Motley original painting in color Motley s family lived in a quiet neighborhood on Chicago s south side in an environment that was racially tolerant In his youth Motley did not spend much time around other Black people It was this disconnection with the African American community around him that established Motley as an outsider Motley himself was light skinned and of mixed racial makeup being African Native American and European Unable to fully associate with either Black nor white Motley wrestled all his life with his own racial identity Although Motley reinforces the association of higher social standing with whiteness or American determinates of beauty he also exposes the diversity within the race as a whole Motley s work made it much harder for viewers to categorize a person as strictly Black or white He showed the nuances and variability that exists within a race making it harder to enforce a strict racial ideology Motley used portraiture as a way of getting to know his own people 2 He realized that in American society different statuses were attributed to each gradation of skin tone Motley portrayed skin color and physical features as belonging to a spectrum He used distinctions in skin color and physical features to give meaning to each shade of African American In the 1920s and 1930s during the New Negro Movement Motley dedicated a series of portraits to types of Negroes He focused mostly on women of mixed racial ancestry and did numerous portraits documenting women of varying African blood quantities octoroon quadroon mulatto In titling his pieces Motley used these antebellum creole classifications mulatto octoroon etc in order to show the social implications of the one drop rule and the dynamics of what it means to be Black He would expose these different negro types as a way to counter the fallacy of labeling all Black people as a generalized people These direct visual reflections of status represented the broader social construction of Blackness and its impact on Black relations By asserting the individuality of African Americans in portraiture Motley essentially demonstrated Blackness as being worthy of formal portrayal 10 These portraits celebrate skin tone as something diverse inclusive and pluralistic 13 They also demonstrate an understanding that these categorizations become synonymous with public identity and influence one s opportunities in life 14 It is often difficult if not impossible to tell what kind of racial mixture the subject has without referring to the title These physical markers of Blackness then are unstable and unreliable and Motley exposed that difference nbsp A painting by Motley with very bright colors Motley spoke to a wide audience of both whites and Blacks in his portraits aiming to educate them on the politics of skin tone if in different ways He hoped to prove to Black people through art that their own racial identity was something to be appreciated For white audiences he hoped to bring an end to Black stereotypes and racism by displaying the beauty and achievements of African Americans By displaying the richness and cultural variety of African Americans the appeal of Motley s work was extended to a wide audience Many were captivated by his portraiture because it contradicted stereotyped images and instead displayed the contemporary black experience 10 This is consistent with Motley s aims of portraying an absolutely accurate and transparent representation of African Americans his commitment to differentiating between skin types shows his meticulous efforts to specify even the slightest differences between individuals In an interview with the Smithsonian Institution Motley explained his motives and the difficulty behind painting the different skin tones of African Americans They re not all the same color they re not all black they re not all as they used to say years ago high yellow they re not all brown I try to give each one of them character as individuals And that s hard to do when you have so many figures to do putting them all together and still have them have their characteristics Motley 1978 By painting the differences in their skin tones Motley is also attempting to bring out the differences in personality of his subjects It could be interpreted that through this differentiating Motley is asking white viewers not to lump all African Americans into the same category or stereotype but to get to know each of them as individuals before making any judgments 15 In this way his work used colorism and class as central mechanisms to subvert stereotypes 16 By harnessing the power of the individual his work engendered positive propaganda that would incorporate black participation in a larger national culture 16 Motley s work pushed the ideal of the multifariousness of Blackness in a way that was widely aesthetically communicable and popular In the end this would instill a sense of personhood and individuality for Blacks through the vehicle of visuality Many whites wouldn t give Motley commissions to paint their portraits yet the majority of his collectors were white 10 He was able to expose a part of the Black community that was often not seen by whites and thus through aesthetics broaden the scope of the authentic Black experience During this time Alain Locke coined the idea of the New Negro which was very focused on creating progressive and uplifting images of Blacks within society In addition many magazines such as the Chicago Defender The Crisis and Opportunity all aligned with prevalent issues of Black representation 2 Aesthetics had a powerful influence in expanding the definitions of race Consequently many were encouraged to take an artistic approach in the context of social progress In The Crisis Carl Van Vechten wrote What are negroes when they are continually painted at their worst and judged by the public as they are painted preventing white artists from knowing any other types of Black people and preventing Black artists from daring to paint them 2 Motley would use portraiture as a vehicle for positive propaganda by creating visual representations of Black diversity and humanity He would break down the dichotomy between Blackness and Americanness by demonstrating social progress through complex visual narratives Works and observation of jazz culture edit nbsp NARA black and white photograph of Black Belt painting by Motley original painting in color His night scenes and crowd scenes heavily influenced by jazz culture are perhaps his most popular and most prolific He depicted a vivid urban black culture that bore little resemblance to the conventional and marginalizing rustic images of black Southerners so familiar in popular culture 17 It is important to note however that it was not his community he was representing he was among the affluent and elite black community of Chicago He married a white woman and lived in a white neighborhood and was not a part of that urban experience in the same way his subjects were Bronzeville at Night edit Source 18 In his paintings of jazz culture Motley often depicted Chicago s Bronzeville neighborhood which offered a safe haven for blacks migrating from the South 19 One of his most famous works showing the urban black community is Bronzeville at Night showing African Americans as actively engaged urban peoples who identify with the city streets In the work Motley provides a central image of the lively street scene and portrays the scene as a distant observer capturing the many individual interactions but paying attention to the big picture at the same time 20 Like many of his other works Motley s cross section of Bronzeville lacks a central narrative For example a brooding man with his hands in his pockets gives a stern look Behind the bus a man throws his arms up ecstatically In the center a man exchanges words with a partner his arm up and head titled as if to show that he is making a point By displaying a balance between specificity and generalization he allows the viewer to identify with the figures and the places of the artist s compositions 20 Stomp edit Source 21 In Stomp Motley painted a busy cabaret scene which again documents the vivid urban black culture The excitement in the painting is palpable one can observe a woman in a white dress throwing her hands up to the sound of the music a couple embracing hand in hand in the back of the cabaret the lively pianist watching the dancers Both black and white couples dance and hobnob with each other in the foreground For example on the right of the painting an African American man wearing a black tuxedo dances with a woman whom Motley gives a much lighter tone By doing this he hoped to counteract perceptions of segregation Critics of Motley point out that the facial features of his subjects are in the same manner as minstrel figures But Motley had no intention to stereotype and hoped to use the racial imagery to increase the appeal and accessibility of his crowds 22 It opened up a more universal audience for his intentions to represent African American progress and urban lifestyle The Octoroon Girl edit Source 23 The Octoroon Girl features a woman who is one eighth black In the image a graceful young woman with dark hair dark eyes and light skin sits on a sofa while leaning against a warm red wall She wears a black velvet dress with red satin trim a dark brown hat and a small gold chain with a pendant In her right hand she holds a pair of leather gloves The woman stares directly at the viewer with a soft but composed gaze Her face is serene Motley balances the painting with a picture frame and the rest of the couch on the left side of the painting Her clothing and background all suggest that she is of higher class The poised posture and direct gaze project confidence The way in which her elongated hands grasp her gloves demonstrates her sense of style and elegance Motley s use of physicality and objecthood in this portrait demonstrates conformity to white aesthetic ideals and shows how these artistic aspects have very realistic historical implications Motley was among the few artists of the 1920s who consistently depicted African Americans in a positive manner 24 The Octoroon Girl is an example of this effort to put African American women in a good light or perhaps simply to make known the realities of middle class African American life Motley s presentation of the woman not only fulfilled his desire to celebrate accomplished blacks but also created an aesthetic role model to which those who desired an elite status might look up to The Octoroon Girl was meant to be a symbol of social racial and economic progress In Motley s paintings he made little distinction between octoroon women and white women depicting octoroon women with material representations of status and European features It appears that the message Motley is sending to his white audience is that even though the octoroon woman is part African American she clearly does not fit the stereotype of being poor and uneducated He requests that white viewers look beyond the genetic indicators of her race and see only the way she acts now distinguished poised and with dignity In his attempt to deconstruct the stereotype Motley has essentially removed all traces of the octoroon s race The Mulatress edit In his portrait The Mulatress 1924 Motley features a mulatto sitter who is very poised and elegant in the way that the octoroon girl is The sitter is strewn with jewelry and sits in such a way that projects a certain chicness and relaxedness She is portrayed as elegant but a sharpness and tenseness are evident in her facial expression Motley was ultimately aiming to portray the troubled and convoluted nature of the tragic mulatto 2 Motley himself identified with this sense of feeling caught in the middle of one s own identity Thus this portrait speaks to the social implications of racial identity by distinguishing the mulatto from the upper echelons of black society that was reserved for octoroons 2 In this way Motley used portraiture in order to demonstrate the complexities of the impact of racial identity Motley used sharp angles and dark contrasts within the model s face to indicate that she was emotional or defiant While this gave the subject more personality and depth it can also be said the Motley played into the stereotype that black women are angry and vindictive Many of the opposing messages that are present in Motley s works are attributed to his relatively high social standing which would create an element of bias even though Motley was also black Still Motley was one of the only artists of the time willing to paint African American models with such precision and accuracy He treated these portraits as a quasi scientific study in the different gradients of race The distinction between the girl s couch and the mulatress wooden chair also reveals the class distinctions that Motley associated with each of his subjects In this series of portraits Motley draws attention to the social distinctions of each subject Nightlife edit Source 25 During this period Motley developed a reusable and recognizable language in his artwork which included contrasting light and dark colors skewed perspectives strong patterns and the dominance of a single hue He also created a set of characters who appeared repeatedly in his paintings with distinctive postures gestures expressions and habits These figures were often depicted standing very close together if not touching or overlapping one another Nightlife in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago depicts a bustling night club with people dancing in the background sitting at tables on the right and drinking at a bar on the left 26 The entire image is flushed with a burgundy light that emanates from the floor and walls creating a warm rich atmosphere for the club goers The rhythm of the music can be felt in the flailing arms of the dancers who appear to be performing the popular Lindy hop In contrast the man in the bottom right corner sits and stares in a drunken stupor Another man in the center and a woman towards the upper right corner also sit isolated and calm in the midst of the commotion of the club In an interview with the Smithsonian Institution Motley explained this disapproval of racism he tries to dispel with Nightlife and other paintings And that s why I say that racism is the first thing that they have got to get out of their heads forget about this damned racism to hell with racism That means nothing to an artist We re all human beings And the sooner that s forgotten and the sooner that you can come back to yourself and do the things that you want to do Motley 1978 In this excerpt Motley calls for the removal of racism from social norms He goes on to say that especially for an artist it shouldn t matter what color of skin someone has everyone is equal He suggests that once racism is erased everyone can focus on his or her self and enjoy life In Nightlife the club patrons appear to have forgotten racism and are making the most of life by having a pleasurable night out listening and dancing to jazz music As a result of the club goers removal of racism from their thoughts Motley can portray them so pleasantly with warm colors and inviting body language 5 Death editMotley died in Chicago on January 16 1981 Personal life editMotley married his high school sweetheart Edith Granzo in 1924 whose German immigrant parents were opposed to their interracial relationship and disowned her for her marriage 1 His nephew raised as his brother Willard Motley was an acclaimed writer known for his 1947 novel Knock on Any Door His daughter in law is Valerie Gerrard Browne Motley was Catholic citation needed Recognition and awards editFrank G Logan prize for the painting A Mulattress 1925 4 Joseph N Eisendrath Award from the Art Institute of Chicago for the painting Syncopation 1925 4 Recipient Guggenheim Fellowship to pursue his studies in Paris 1929 30 4 Harmon Foundation Award for outstanding contributions to the field of art 1928 4 Receives honorary doctorate from the School of the Art Institute 1980 4 Honored with nine other African American artists by President Jimmy Carter at the White House 1980 4 Retrospective exhibition editThe Art of Archibald J Motley Jr the first retrospective of the artist s work opened at the Chicago Historical Society on October 23 1991 and then traveled to the Studio Museum in Harlem in New York City April 25 June 10 1992 the High Museum Georgia Pacific Gallery Atlanta GA June 29 September 25 1992 and the Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington DC October 10 1992 January 3 1992 Archibald Motley Jazz Age Modernist the first retrospective of the American artist s paintings in two decades opened at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University on January 30 2014 The exhibition then traveled to The Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth Texas June 14 September 7 2014 The Los Angeles County Museum of Art October 19 2014 February 1 2015 The Chicago Cultural Center March 6 August 31 2015 and The Whitney Museum of American Art New York October 2 2015 January 17 2016 References edit a b Archibald Motley artist of African American life Theater the Arts The African American Registry Archived from the original on May 5 2015 Retrieved July 14 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Mooney Amy 1999 Representing Race Disjunctures in the Work of Archibald Motley Jr Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies 24 2 163 265 doi 10 2307 4112967 JSTOR 4112967 Mooney Ann M 2004 Archibald J Motley Jr Petaluma California Pomegranate Communications Inc pp v ISBN 9780764928864 a b c d e f g Reich Howard March 20 2015 Some key moments in Archibald Motley s life and art Chicago Tribune Retrieved 23 May 2015 a b c d e f Motley Archibald Jr Oral History Interview with Archibald Motley Interview by Dennis Barrie for the Smithsonian Archives of American Art a b c Georgiady N L Romano and R Green Archibald J Motley American Negro Artist Franklin Publishers Inc Milwaukee Wisconsin 1969 Motley Archibald Jr 1891 1981 Encyclopedia com Martinez Andrew A Mixed Reception for Modernism The 1913 Armory Show at the Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies vol 19 no 1 1993 p 31 Woodall Elaine D Looking Backward Archibald J Motley and the Art Institute of Chicago 1914 1930 Chicago History The Magazine of the Chicago Historical Society Spring 1979 vol VIII no 1 pp 53 57 a b c d Greenhouse Wendy 1998 An Early Portrait by Archibald Motley Jr American Art Journal 29 1 2 97 102 doi 10 2307 1594621 JSTOR 1594621 Robinson Jontyle Theresa and Charles Austin Page Jr Mending socks and tales of Africa The Christian Science Monitor October 15 1987 Retrieved 2015 10 03 from www csmonitor com Archibald Motley Biography Harris Michael D Color Lines Mapping Color Consciousness in the Art of Archibald Motley Jr Colored Pictures Race and Visual Representation Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2003 De Souza Pauline Black Awakening Gender and Representation in the Harlem Renaissance in Katy Deepwell ed Women Artists and Modernism Manchester University Press 1998 pp 55 69 Oral history interview with Archibald Motley 1978 Jan 23 1979 Mar 1 Oral Histories Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution a b Wolfskill Phoebe 2009 Caricature and the New Negro in the Work of Archibald Motley Jr and Palmer Hayden The Art Bulletin 91 3 343 365 doi 10 1080 00043079 2009 10786158 S2CID 191463495 Pilgrim David The Mammy Caricature The Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia Big Rapids Ferris State University 2000 Bronzeville by Night 1949 Archibald Motley WikiArt org www wikiart org Retrieved 2023 12 08 Amy M Mooney Archibald J Motley Jr 2004 p 86 a b Amy M Mooney Archibald J Motley Jr 2004 p 95 Stomp 1927 Archibald Motley WikiArt org www wikiart org Retrieved 2023 12 08 Amy M Mooney Archibald J Motley Jr 2004 p 88 The Octoroon Girl 1925 Archibald Motley WikiArt org www wikiart org Retrieved 2023 12 08 Coleman Floyd 1995 Down home and uptown Archibald Motley Jr and the evolution of African American art American Heritage 1 46 18 Nightlife 1943 Archibald Motley WikiArt org www wikiart org Retrieved 2023 12 08 Motley Archibald John Jr Nightlife The Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved 2021 05 24 Further reading editPowell Richard editor Mooney Amy M contributor February 10 2014 Archibald Motley Jazz Age Modernist Paperback ed Duke University Press Books ISBN 978 0938989370 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Reich Howard Chicago s Jazz Age still lives in Archibald Motley s art Chicago Tribune No March 20 2015 Retrieved May 26 2015 Robinson Jontyle Theresa and Wendy Greenhouse The Art of Archibald John Motley Jr Chicago Chicago Historical Society 1991 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Archibald Motley Archibald Motley Jazz Age Modernist Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archibald Motley amp oldid 1213250684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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