“I think that every
picture should tell a story
and I think if a picture doesn't tell a story then it's not a picture.”
Archibald Motley
and I think if a picture doesn't tell a story then it's not a picture.”
Archibald Motley
Twenty eight years after determining
to become an artist, Archibald Motley
became the first African-American artist to have a solo exhibition in New York City.
The Chicago based Motley was a nine year old when he decided upon becoming a
painter.
As he explained in his Smithsonian
oral history “I just felt it was the only thing I could do; I couldn't do
anything else.”
In 1914, as a 23 year old, Motley became
one of the four black students at the Art
Institute of Chicago where he embarked upon the traditional formal art
education prevalent at the time with its emphasis on portraiture and the nude. But
the forward thinking Motley embraced the compositional challenges of multi
figure scenes.
As he said “Composition was the thing that I was more
interested in than anything else because I felt that I could build up more
paintings in composition and more salable things than I could with portraits
and nudes… And I found composition got so intriguing, so very interesting to
compose something in your mind, your imagination and build it up and make
something out of it.”
And it was a premonition that proved to be true. Upon graduation Motley
started out painting portraits but eventually switched to chronicling the African-American experience.
About which he told the Smithsonian’s Dennis Barrie
“I first started doing portraits as I told you, you know, my grandmother there,
my mother, these people that I met on the outside, strangers that I painted,
and some friends. Then I found, too, that in the Negro race, or colored race as
I call it, they didn't have the money to pay for commissioned portraits. Of
course, the white artists had all the white clientele all tied up. They
wouldn't come to me, you know, some of these big people that have money, they'd
go to their friends, somebody white. So I figured I had learned a heck of a lot
about composition. Why not paint compositions and pictures that people will buy
regardless of race, color or creed? So it was only that drove me --well, it
didn't drive me into painting compositions because I always liked composition.
Then I started doing a lot of compositions. I found that they were salable and
I didn't have [to employ] a model.”
The success of Motley’s New York exhibition, he sold 22 to the 26 hung
works, saw him awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship the
following year that allowed Motley to spend all of 1929 in France. Apart from
producing 12 paintings whilst in Paris, Motley spent a lot of time at the
Louvre studying the European old masters.
About which he said “Oh, I spent so much time there! That was my biggest
inspiration. The biggest thing I ever wanted to do in art was to paint like the
old masters… You've got to study a painting a long time to realize what the
artist really is doing. Light is very, very important. I used to go to the
Louvre and study, I studied all the old masters very carefully. You know, what
we call "in" painting, the passages of tones.”
It was study that served him well as one of the first African-American artists
to portray the characters from the diverse racial
backgrounds and social classes that people America’s Black urban
neighborhoods.
As he has said "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."
New York’s Whitney Museum has
the exhibition Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist on show until the 17th of January next year.
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