Collage: Bearden's Signature Style
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, some of Bearden's collages
became more painterly. The ratio of painted surface is equal to
or
greater than the collaged areas. An example of this late painterly
style is Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Midtown Sunset.
Here the two techniques—collage and painting—seem perfectly
balanced. It is difficult
to distinguish the collaged areas from the painted ones. Overall
there is fluidity and luminosity that produces a glow from within.
Bearden
described the scene as "my last view of daylight as I entered the
subway on my way home from N.Y.U."
Midtown Sunset is one of nineteen collages from the Profile/Part
II series, which focuses primarily on Bearden's life in Harlem. In this
view of New York City, Bearden's underlying geometry is apparent.
The picture plane is divided into two rectangles: on the left the
sun is just beginning to set, and on the right the moon has risen.
Bearden's recurring sun/moon motif gives us a sense of time elapsing
(and collapsing). The space is shallow with building stacked upon
building. The arcs and spire of the Chrysler Building are seen in
the upper left corner. Patterns of short brushstrokes and bleached
areas suggest the window-filled walls of skyscrapers. The bleached
areas lend a luminous effect. Amidst the painted buildings, Bearden
has used cut-paper ones to fill in this cityscape. |
Romare Bearden, Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Midtown
Sunset, 1981, Private Collection
On the right side, patterns of horizontal and vertical lines extend
the cut-paper cityscape to the top edge of the work. The ubiquitous
symbol of a train creates a strong horizontal. In the bottom right
corner a rectangle of blurred black, blue, green, and yellow perhaps
suggests the passing of the subway, the rush of the crowd, the city's
eternal movement. |