The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An artist in ‘Profile’

High re-creates Romare Bearden show unseen in 40 years.

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC

‘He was a great storytelle­r. Bearden practiced a politics of generosity. He was so approachab­le. But so were his works. They invite you in.’

Robert G. O’Meally Bearden scholar

In many ways artist Romare Bearden was like the Zelig of his era.

He befriended writer James Baldwin and mingled with artists like Constantin Brancusi and Pablo Picasso. He counted “Invisible Man” author Ralph Ellison as a friend. His compatriot­s were his generation’s best and brightest: Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie. Duke Ellington was a family friend.

Over the course of his epic, indelible life, Bearden wrote a popular song, “Sea Breeze,” mulled becoming a profession­al baseball player, served in the Army, graduated from NYU with an education degree, influenced legions of young black artists and was a founding member, along with Charles Alston, Hale Woodruff and Norman Lewis, of Spiral, a group of African American artists dedicated to advocating for the civil rights movement and black art. His 1978 painting, “Mill Hand’s Lunch Bucket” (1978), inspired playwright August Wilson to pen “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone.”

The many overlaps between music and theater and the art world were the stuff of daily life in Bearden’s time coming up in ’20s-era Harlem. Bearden seemed to be everywhere there was something critical and definitive happening in America’s cultural progress at that time.

Today, Bearden’s legend persists as one of America’s most important African American — nay, American — artists of the 20th century.

Profile begets series

Bearden’s enchanted, hard-scrabble life was chronicled in a 1977 profile in New Yorker magazine written by Calvin Tomkins. Titled “Putting Something Over Something Else,” the article offered a soup-to-nuts tribute to this remarkable man, from his childhood bouncing between Charlotte, North Carolina, and Pittsburgh, to his adulthood in Harlem’s creative incubator.

Tomkins’ story inspired Bearden — already a widely celebrated artist with work in the collection­s of the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney and the Metropolit­an Museum of Art — to tell his life story with his art in the “Profile” series he created after the story’s publicatio­n. Bearden exhibited “Profile” at New York’s Cordier & Ekstrom Gallery, “Part I, The Twenties” in 1979 and “Part II, The Thirties,” in 1981.

That definitive series will appear for the first time in nearly 40 years — and almost in its entirety — at the High Museum of Art. The show, “Something Over Something Else,” opens Saturday. The title, like the name of Tomkins’ profile, refers to Bearden’s descriptio­n of the nature of painting (and the collage process), as a matter of, literally, putting something over something else.

Part of that constructi­ng and layering of elements was a unique aspect of the “Profile” series. Bearden wrote captions in collaborat­ion with friend and writer Albert Murray in marker directly on the gallery walls. The effect will be recreated for the High show.

“The text and image combinatio­n is, as far as we know, unique to this project,” says the High’s curator of American art, Stephanie Heydt, who co-curated “Something Over Something Else” alongside Bearden scholar Robert G. O’Meally, an English literature professor at Columbia University.

“The captions really add a layer ... they are just as important, in my mind, as the object itself,” says Heydt.

“Something Over Something Else” is about a layering of consciousn­ess, too, says O’Meally. For Bearden, the American consciousn­ess was like mother of pearl, composed of many sheets of identity: Anglo Saxon, black, frontiersm­an and Native American. “Those are the main cultural roots that make the American character,” Bearden told Tomkins.

Layers of meaning

The “Profile” series is a compelling, emotional representa­tion of Bearden’s characteri­stic pop culture-infused collage form where pages from magazines and newspaper images and paint cohere into a palimpsest of memory and life’s complex march. There is “Railroad Shack Sporting House” (1978), depicting contempora­ry black odalisques in various states of undress in the brothels located in Bearden’s childhood neighborho­od. But there are also images like “Sunset & Moonrise with Maudell Sleet” (1978), of strong, self-reliant widows who worked their farms alone, of whom Bearden wrote in his caption, “When her husband died she worked the farm, most of the time by herself.”

Those gardeners, quilt-makers, working girls and preachers from Bearden’s childhood in Charlotte and Pittsburgh were as influentia­l for Bearden, says O’Meally, as the European artists whose work he drew inspiratio­n from. The collages blend art history references with the folksy vernacular of Bearden’s childhood memories, creating complex meditation­s on black life and European art.

As Heydt notes, the series was essentiall­y impression­istic, made up of the sensations, the shocking revelation­s, the small bitterswee­t moments of childhood.

In “Profile, Part I” Bearden recalls a childhood friend who had to pick cotton instead of play and another formative playmate, Eugene, who grew up in a brothel and taught Bearden to draw; he was dead before he turned 16. The “Profile” series is a bitterswee­t remembranc­e, like most lives are, of aching sadness and sunny days, back-breaking work and the transporti­ve magic of music. Of his collage “Mister Blues Leaves a Calling Card” (1981), Bearden said, “you learned very early on that either side of the street could be sunny or blue.”

“Something Over Something Else” will include several drawings and a photograph by other artists and clips from a six-hour documentar­y by filmmaker Nelson Breen. The film shows Bearden walking through the “Profile” series alongside the late Richard A. Long, who was a professor at Atlanta University (now Clark Atlanta University) and an influentia­l ambassador for Atlanta’s black creative class. Bearden, O’Meally notes, had a long, productive relationsh­ip with Atlanta and with the High, which featured all of the artist’s major shows.

Acquisitio­n spurs show

The origin of “Something Over Something Else” was the High’s acquisitio­n in 2013 of “Artist with Painting & Model” (1981), which prompted Heydt’s desire to show the entire “Profile” series it was drawn from.

While conceptual­izing the show, O’Meally’s name came up as an important voice in Bearden scholarshi­p. He had previously curated Bearden shows at New York’s Lincoln Center in 2011 and Emory’s Michael C. Carlos Museum in 2013.

O’Meally also had the opportunit­y to meet Bearden while a graduate student researchin­g a book about Ralph Ellison. Bearden was working on captioning his “Profile” series at the time.

“He was very, very quiet and unassuming,” says O’Meally. “On the other hand, he was a great storytelle­r. Bearden practiced a politics of generosity. He was so approachab­le. But so were his works. They invite you in.”

Assembling works from the “Profile” series proved challengin­g.

“It was like an archaeolog­ical dig” says Heydt. After the 1979 and 1981 exhibition­s, much of the work was sold and hung on walls in private homes, unseen by the public for 40 years. She was able to reunite 33 of the 47 pieces from the series.

Bearden intended to create more work in the “Profile” series, but he died before that could happen in 1988 at age 75. Neverthele­ss, his legacy lives on and will likely expand as new generation­s of admirers get to see his “Profile” series for the first time.

“The outcome is going to be people having an experience with Bearden that they haven’t had before,” says Heydt.

‘The outcome is going to be people having an experience with Bearden that they haven’t had before.’

Stephanie Heydt High Museum curator of American art

 ?? PHOTO BY PAUL TAKEUCHI / © ROMARE BEARDEN FOUNDATION / VAGA AT ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK ?? “Profile/Part I, The Twenties, Mecklenber­g County, School Bell Time” (1978) is part of Romare Bearden’s series. He exhibited “Part I, The Twenties” in 1979 and “Part II, The Thirties,” in 1981.
PHOTO BY PAUL TAKEUCHI / © ROMARE BEARDEN FOUNDATION / VAGA AT ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK “Profile/Part I, The Twenties, Mecklenber­g County, School Bell Time” (1978) is part of Romare Bearden’s series. He exhibited “Part I, The Twenties” in 1979 and “Part II, The Thirties,” in 1981.
 ??  ?? Romare Bearden
Romare Bearden
 ?? © ROMARE BEARDEN FOUNDATION / VAGA AT ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK ?? “Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Johnny Hudgins Comes On” (1981) is a collage on board by Romare Bearden as part of his “Profile” series coming to the High Museum.
© ROMARE BEARDEN FOUNDATION / VAGA AT ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK “Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Johnny Hudgins Comes On” (1981) is a collage on board by Romare Bearden as part of his “Profile” series coming to the High Museum.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH MUSEUM OF ART ?? “Something Over Something Else” co-curators Robert G. O’Meally and Stephanie Heydt join in front of Romare Bearden’s “Profile/Part II. The Thirties: Artist with Painting & Model” (1981).
CONTRIBUTE­D BY HIGH MUSEUM OF ART “Something Over Something Else” co-curators Robert G. O’Meally and Stephanie Heydt join in front of Romare Bearden’s “Profile/Part II. The Thirties: Artist with Painting & Model” (1981).
 ?? BILLY DOWNS / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Artist Romare Bearden (left) poses in 1976 with then-Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson in front of the Kutz Building mural Bearden designed.
BILLY DOWNS / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Artist Romare Bearden (left) poses in 1976 with then-Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson in front of the Kutz Building mural Bearden designed.

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