Browse Items (25 total)

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/c37bc08415f631c45cf79f5bce5caf98.jpg
This map depicts the social nightlife of Harlem in the early 1930’s. It was drawn by E. Simms Campbell who was an African American artists in the 1900’s, who frequently had his work publish in African American magazines. The map shows specific night…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/838c3f07039dff1bab8ae7f603b9b71e.jpg
Jazz was a major part of the culture of 1920s. The newly available technology such as radio and phonographs allowed this type of music to be easily accessed by all groups. For one of the first times in history, it was easy for the general public to…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/30aba3184b02a2271f8b0a143a2eb649.jpg
“We have to-morrow
Bright before us
Like a flame”
(663, Hughes)

This quote from one of Langston Hughes’ many poems expresses the hope that African Americans have during the time of the Harlem Renaissance. Hughes refers to this bright future as…

The exact location of this street scene in Harlem is unknown, however, it captures the energy, commerce and fashion in Harlem during the 1920s. As James Weldon Johnson described in The Making of Harlem, Harlem was a "self supporting community".…

https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/18882/archive/files/ce3b5c830debd0215e417d520f6ad0de.jpg
Apparently a photograph from Life Magazine, showing Alberto Giacometti with a number of his sculptures. In form, they distinctly resemble the African art Alain Locke included in his article, "The Art of Our Ancestors," in the issue of Survey Graphic…
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