The Art of Romare Bearden: A Resource for Teachers  
   
Coda: Artist to Artist Method Artistic and Literary Sources Music A Leader in the Arts Community Memories Biography Bearden at a Glance

A Leader in the Arts Community     1 of 2 

As a child, Romare Bearden had learned the value of making positive contributions and shaping the ideas and policies of a community. His mother Bessye was a community leader. In 1922 she was the first black woman elected to a local school board, serving on the New York City School Board No. 15 until 1939. From 1927 to 1928, she was the New York editor of the Chicago Defender, a popular African-American weekly newspaper that reported on race-related issues in the United States. As a prominent social figure in Harlem, Bessye Bearden brought the arts home, hosting regular gatherings of the black intelligentsia that included such luminaries as Langston HughesLangston Hughes and Duke Ellington. Bearden, too, would seek out the intellectual stimulation of fellow artists. Early in his career, he became involved in numerous arts organizations, such as the Harlem Artists' Guild and the 306 studio (a gathering place at 141st Street for artists, writers, and musicians).

Langston Hughes, 1942, Library of Congress, photo: Jack Delano

In 1963 Bearden and fellow artist Hale Woodruff invited other artists, later calling themselves the Spiral group, to meet at Bearden's downtown Canal Street studio to discuss political events related to the civil rights movement and the plight of blacks in America. Initially the group was concerned with logistical issues, such as obtaining busses to travel to the March on Washington in the summer of 1963. However, their efforts turned toward aesthetic concerns, rather than political. Spiral member Norman Lewis framed the question: "Is there a Negro Image?" To which group member Felrath Hines responded, "There is no Negro Image in the twentieth century—in the 1960s. There are only prevailing ideas that influence everyone all over the world, to which the Negro has been, and is, contributing. Each person paints out of the life he lives." Spiral sought to define how it could contribute to the civil rights movement and to what author Ralph Ellison called a "new visual order."

Activity: Organize an Exhibition



Woodruff suggested Spiral as a name for the group, alluding to the Archimedean Spiral, which moves outward and constantly upward. Spiral's First Group Showing was subtitled Works in Black and White. Bearden had suggested the exhibition's black-and-white theme because it comprised both socio-political and formal concerns.



Poster for art classes at the Harlem Community Center,  mid '30s
Poster for art classes at the Harlem Community Center, mid-1930s. Library of Congress

Hale Woodruff
Hale Woodruff


Activity: What's Your Cause?

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