Aaron douglas and Hale Woodruff: African American Art Education, Gallery Work, and Expanded Pedagogy

This analysis of archival materials discovered at Fisk and Atlanta Universities examines the teaching careers of Aaron Douglas and Hale Woodruff, two African American artists who came to prominence during the New Negro Movement in the 1920s and taught at historically Black1 universities in the 1930s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in art education 2011-01, Vol.52 (2), p.112-126
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creator Bey, Sharif
description This analysis of archival materials discovered at Fisk and Atlanta Universities examines the teaching careers of Aaron Douglas and Hale Woodruff, two African American artists who came to prominence during the New Negro Movement in the 1920s and taught at historically Black1 universities in the 1930s and 1940s. These artists had a profound influence on this era of art education in the segregated South. This research specifically focuses on how Douglas and Woodruff asserted themselves and expanded learning opportunities through networks and exhibition programming that challenged racial subjugation. My findings indicate that the limitations of traditional classroom instruction 2 disallowed their teaching content which focused upon and empowered African Americans to sustain themselves as mainstream artists in the United States. However, their influence and responsibility to a future generation of African American artists serve as pedagogical content that may instill racial pride otherwise absent in the curriculum.
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source ARTbibliographies Modern; EBSCOhost Education Source; JSTOR
subjects Academic Libraries
African American Community
African American culture
African American Education
African American Students
African American studies
African American Teachers
African Americans
African art
Archives
Art Education
Art exhibitions
Art Teachers
Artists
Arts Centers
Biographies
Black Colleges
Black communities
Careers
College campuses
College Faculty
Conventional Instruction
Educational Facilities Improvement
Educational History
Educational Opportunities
Networks
Painting (Visual Arts)
Pedagogy
Private Financial Support
Professional Recognition
Programming
Racial Discrimination
Racial Relations
United States
Universities
title Aaron douglas and Hale Woodruff: African American Art Education, Gallery Work, and Expanded Pedagogy
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