ARTS
A Force for Change: African American Art and the Julius Rosenwald Fund
When:
February 7 - July 25 10:00am - 06:00pm
Where:
Montclair Art Museum -
Montclair
Category:
Category:
Arts
A Force for Change is the first exhibition to explore the legacy of the Julius Rosenwald Fund, created in 1917 by the well known Chicago businessman and philanthropist. The Rosenwald Fund's Fellowship Program was designed to foster black leadership through the arts, literature, and scholarship, and between 1928 and 1948, the program awarded stipends to hundreds of African American artists, writers, and scholars across many disciplines.
A Force for Change presents the artistic products of Julius Rosenwald’s support, and includes more than 60 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by 22 Rosenwald fellows, as well as an original short documentary film. The artists in the exhibition are among the foremost of their era: Elizabeth Catlett, Aaron Douglas, Jacob Lawrence, Gordon Parks, Rose Piper, Augusta Savage, Charles White, Hale Woodruff, and more. The exhibition was organized for the Spertus Museum, Chicago, by guest curator Daniel Schulman.
The exhibition will be complemented by an installation of approximately 20 works by African American artists from the Montclair Art Museum's permanent collection.
Destination: Montclair Art Museum
- Montclair Art Museum
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Montclair Art Museum
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Website
- Street:
-
3 S Mountain Ave
- City:
-
Montclair NJ, 07042
Description
The Montclair Art Museum collects, preserves, and presents American and Native American art. Its innovative exhibitions and educational programs interpret and explore relationships between these two evolving artistic traditions. The Museum's exhibitions offer groundbreaking scholarship, fresh thematic approaches, first-time presentations of under-recognized artists, examinations of little-known aspects of major artists' careers, and an ongoing commitment to the artists and culture of New Jersey. Sharing its distinguished collections, specialized expertise, and unique resources such as its Le Brun Library and Yard School of Art, the Museum collaborates with numerous cultural and community partners to inspire creativity and a deeper understanding of America's unique diversity.