A SHARED HERITAGE African American Culture Flourished Through His Painting to Inspire the Received Early Instruction from Promi in the Mid- to Late-1920S
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. A SHARED HERITAGE African American culture flourished through his painting to inspire the received early instruction from promi in the mid- to late-1920s. Countee Cullen artistic talents of Indianapolis's black nent members of the Hoosier Group, published his first volume of poems, community. John We sley Hardrick primarily William Forsyth (1854-.-1935) Color(19 25); the \#a ry Blues (1926) by (1891-1968), fo r a brochure accom and Otto Stark (1859-1926). Hardrick, Langston Hughes appeared on popular panying an exhibition of his paintings, Scott, and Wo odruff were among a reading lists; satirist George S. Schuyler wrote that his goal was "to stimulate growing number of aspiring black artists wrote fo r The American Mercury; and an interest among the colored citizens who were participating in the devel Claude McKay's novel Home to Ha rlem of Indianapolis to encourage art; to in opment of American art on a regional (1928) became a best-seller. These spire, if possible, some young talented and national basis during the early RAINY NIGHT, ETAPLES. 1912. WILLIAM E. SCOT T. INDIANAPOLIS MUSEUM OF ART, GIFT OF A GROUP OF AFRICAN AMERICAN CITIZENS OF INDIANAPOLIS. African Americans were among the boy or girl to realize that 'Life without 1900s. They also seized a "chance fo r many who contributed to a literary and labor is a crime, and labor without art group expression and self determina artistic movement known as the Harlem is brutality."' tion" by turning to black subject mat Renaissance. Through art, leader and Hardrick and his contemporaries ter in their work. chief interpreter of the movement William Edouard Scott (1884-1964) William Edouard Scott studied Alain Locke said in 1926, "Negro life and Hale Aspacio Wo odruff(1 900-1980) under Otto Stark at Emmerich Manual is seizing its first chance fo r group were members of Indianapolis's black Training High School in Indianapolis expression and self determination." community who would make names fo r and attended the School of the Art As early as 1914, far from Harlem, a themselves in the art world. Although Institute of Chicago; in 1909 Scott trav young African American artist hoped their later art training varied, they each eled to Paris fo r further instruction. By Wi11ter 1996 41 .