海角大神

Walking in the path of the Harlem Renaissance

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Ken Makin
Lawrence Henderson, a Harlem native and leader of the Soul of Harlem tour, stands near the 鈥淧lanet Harlem鈥 mural, Nov. 16, 2023.

Tour guide Lawrence Henderson stops to admire his favorite mural, 鈥淧lanet Harlem.鈥 Artist Paul Deo鈥檚 work is peopled with a galaxy of Black stars 鈥搇imitless luminaries in politics, entertainment, and resistance.聽

Mr. Henderson, a former service member and prison guard, says his eyes light up every time he sees this work of art. 鈥淢ost murals you see have a particular theme, but this covers everything!鈥 he says during a recent three-hour walking tour.聽

鈥淗arlem loves its heroes,鈥 Mr. Henderson says. One way to learn about the neighborhood that inspired artists and writers, activists and poets, is by walking among the streets now named for many of them. The fruits of that inspiration will soon be on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, when it presents 鈥淭he Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism.鈥 Opening Feb. 25, the exhibit will be New York City鈥檚 first focus on the renaissance since 1987.

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The Harlem Renaissance is the subject of a new exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Our cultural commentator relished his time walking the same streets that sheltered Langston Hughes, Malcolm X, and Alain Locke.

One hundred years after its launch, the Black arts renaissance remains relevant, whether it鈥檚 inspiring the next generation of artists or providing a gateway to a proud cultural past. The Met exhibit not only taps into this sense of Black pride, but also draws from institutions with histories as radical as the art it plans to display.

The Met exhibit seeks to reframe the Harlem Renaissance as 鈥渢he first African American-led movement of international modern art,鈥 the museum said in a press release. Organizers plan to explore how Black artists portrayed city life in the 1920s-1940s 鈥 in the early part of the Great Migration, 鈥渨hen millions of African Americans began to move away from the segregated rural South.鈥

漏 Estate of Archibald John Motley Jr. All Reserved Rights 2023/Bridgeman Images/Courtesy of Hampton University
鈥淏lack Belt鈥 (1934) by Archibald John Motley Jr. features a scene from Chicago. On loan from Hampton University, it will be on display at the Met鈥檚 Harlem Renaissance exhibit.

It will feature over 160 works of painting, sculpture, photography, film, and ephemera, some of which are on loan from historically Black colleges and universities such as Clark Atlanta University and Howard University. Danille Taylor, director of Clark Atlanta鈥檚 art museum, which donated a quintet of pieces, believes that this exhibit is a commentary not only on Black life, but on legacy as well.

鈥淚 think these exhibits are educational. They provide physical evidence of the past, so that the past can be in dialogue with the present, and the present can be in dialogue with the past,鈥 says Dr. Taylor in a phone interview. 鈥淸The Harlem Renaissance] had the New Negro, now we have Black Lives Matter, and they鈥檙e very much the same. We are human and we demand to be seen.鈥

Harlem has exhibited that message for generations, through historians, street vendors, and a collective consciousness. 鈥淧lanet Harlem,鈥 the apple of Mr. Henderson鈥檚 eye, is reflective of the adaptability of art beyond the confines of a museum. Mr. Deo himself is cognizant of protecting the people鈥檚 art, calling for his mural to gain 鈥渓andmark status.鈥

Locke, Hughes, and Harlem鈥檚 鈥淕odfather鈥

It鈥檚 hard to imagine that for the first 200 years of its existence, Harlem was undeveloped farmland. And yet, even in its modern incarnation, the city still has tillers 鈥 from street vendors to artisans to bakers.

The father of the Harlem Renaissance was Alain Locke. He was a writer and a dreamer. His first anthology, 鈥淭he New Negro: An Interpretation,鈥 was published in 1925. It was a collection of works from dynamic artists and analysts such as Zora Neale Hurston, Countee Cullen, and W.E.B. Du Bois. As Locke put it in his essay, this was a period of renewal, of self-respect, and of self-dependence among Black people.

Archive Photos/Getty Images
Swing dancers take to the floor at the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem, circa 1947.

Harlem has always been in the process of healing. Its current battles and sources of pride are all on display during one of Mr. Henderson鈥檚 excursions. The Harlem Hospital Mural Pavilion greets onlookers with a trio of images, for example. There鈥檚 a picture of Cab Calloway at the Cotton Club; a picture of Black professionals, or as Mr. Henderson puts it, 鈥淏lack excellence鈥; and a depiction of the Great Migration.聽

In Locke鈥檚 anthology, there is an essay from historian and writer Arturo Schomburg titled 鈥淭he Negro Digs Up His Past.鈥 With so much talk of renaissance and rebirth, Schomburg focuses on another R-word: restoration. 鈥淗istory must restore what slavery took away,鈥 he writes, 鈥渇or it is the social damage of slavery that the present generations must repair and offset. So among the rising democratic millions we find the Negro thinking more collectively, more retrospectively than the rest.鈥

Schomburg, whose name is on Harlem鈥檚 Center for Research in Black Culture, took his own message to heart. His library of Black works, which grew beyond the capacity of his home, was shared with a division of the New York Public Library that eventually became the Schomburg Center. Years later, his life and legacy continue to grow like a tree planted by the rivers of water.

In the Schomburg Center, there is a lobby named after Langston Hughes, which honors both of Harlem鈥檚 heroic historians. The lobby is literally Hughes鈥 final resting place: His ashes are buried underneath. There is a mural of sorts in the floor 鈥 a cosmogram linking Hughes and Schomburg with African ritual ground markings and other measurements. The center says the cosmogram is 鈥渨eaving a web of connections between people of diverse cultures and backgrounds, the past and the present.鈥澛

During the course of the journey through Harlem, Mr. Henderson also engages tourists with talk about gentrification. The demographics of Harlem are changing. Black residents made up 90% of Central Harlem in the 1980s. In 2021, it was 44%.

An online petition from the New York Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality has a two-word message: 鈥淪ave Harlem!鈥 The group鈥檚 angst stems from an Ivy League institution, Columbia University, and private developers 鈥渁iming to destroy and displace thousands of Harlem鈥檚 residents.鈥

Ken Makin
In New York, the Harlem Hospital Mural Pavilion (in November 2023) features images that highlight (from left to right) the Harlem Renaissance, Black achievement, and the Great Migration.

Mr. Henderson stands in front of the Lenox Terrace apartments and talks about the infamous Ellsworth Raymond 鈥淏umpy鈥 Johnson, the 鈥淕odfather of Harlem.鈥 Johnson had South Carolina roots as well; he was born in Charleston on All Hallows鈥 Eve in 1905. The historic terrace was where he called home, and even with his criminal reputation, he was beloved by Harlem.

With the rising cost of housing 鈥 and employment 鈥 Harlem is hanging on for dear life. A vendor named Divine Styles proudly displays what equates to a curbside bookstore. There is a red, black, and green flag adorning the stand, and the mutuality between the vendor and Mr. Henderson is apparent even before one sees the similarly colored flag on the tour guide鈥檚 jacket. The Pan-African flag, also known as the RBG flag, symbolizes unity among people of African descent.

Divine Styles laments that his stand is always on the move, most recently forced out of his old spot by the new Victoria hotel. Nevertheless, true to Harlem, he remains optimistic.

鈥淚 love this corner,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y goal is to publish a book about all of the vendors on 125th Street.鈥

鈥淏efore they鈥檙e gone?鈥 Mr. Henderson asks.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to let that happen,鈥 Mr. Styles responds. 鈥淭here should be a Black preservation 鈥 something to protect the vendors.鈥

鈥淏y Any Means Necessary鈥

It鈥檚 hard to fathom that after hundreds of years, there are parts of Harlem that are still underdeveloped. But the tillers persevere. And so does Harlem鈥檚 soul.

There is an unfinished mural with a host of celebrity images and four words that Malcolm X made famous 鈥 鈥淏y Any Means Necessary.鈥 The artists? Pipps and Marissa, the former of whom was seemingly inspired by Gladys Knight, the 鈥淓mpress of Soul.鈥

The mural, which was commissioned by a community outreach program, has a quintet of images in which a famous elder is inspiring a young person. There鈥檚 Muhammad Ali fitting a boxing glove on a youngster and Serena Williams offering a tennis lesson. On the other side, there鈥檚 LeBron James shooting hoops with a young prot茅g茅 and Simone Biles instructing a future gymnast. At the heart of the piece is Malcolm X, reading a book to a child.

鈥淭hey wanted to show change-makers in a particular field working with youth, pretty much, you know, passing the torch,鈥 Pipps says. 鈥淚 want Malcolm to be in the center because he鈥檚 from this community.鈥

Courtesy of Clark Atlanta University Art Museum
鈥淲oman in Blue鈥 (circa 1943) by William Henry Johnson is included in the upcoming Harlem Renaissance exhibit at New York鈥檚 Metropolitan Museum of Art. It is from the Clark Atlanta University Art Museum.

The highlight of the project might have been the community paint day on Nov. 14, when onlookers and other participants were allowed to paint the mural.

鈥淲e had small kids here, elderly people, people stopping at the bus stop. Everyone was allowed to paint,鈥 Marissa says. 鈥淚 love inspiring people and letting them know they can do whatever.鈥

For this journalist, one of the highlights of the tour is a stop for red velvet cake from Cake Man Raven. His bakery is about four minutes from the 鈥淧lanet Harlem鈥 mural, and it is a confectionary to the stars. His clients, he says, have included Jay-Z and Whoopi Goldberg. The crimson in that delectable delight is a reminder of the power of migration. Red velvet cake is commonly thought of as a Southern delicacy, and the Cake Man, from Florence, South Carolina, is quick to note his roots.聽

As the tour comes to a close, the marquees for the Apollo Theater and the former Victoria Theater are a reminder of Harlem鈥檚 imposing history. At night, their neon lights illuminate the sky and one鈥檚 imagination. In daylight, the cultural landmarks represent the thin line between struggle and progress. 聽

A block or so down the street, another legend adept at migration comes to the forefront 鈥 Harriet Tubman, whose memorial sits at a fork in the road. It is a striking piece, replete with distinctive roots that represent slavery. Her skirt is decorated with images of enslaved people she led to freedom. It is worth mentioning that Tubman is one of America鈥檚 great generals due to her leadership in the Combahee River Raid in the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

The duality of Harlem 鈥 of Black struggle and progress 鈥 comes through in Mr. Henderson鈥檚 closing words. There is lament and love.

鈥淧eople in Harlem, they complain about things changing, and rightfully so. But we had Harlem for 100 years. We claimed it and we let it slip through our hands,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are many reasons. We couldn鈥檛 get loans from banks. Systemic racism.

鈥淚t hurts to see Black people down and out,鈥 he adds. 鈥淜nowing our potential, knowing how much we accomplished.鈥

As Mr. Henderson departs, his words resonate. So do the words of Locke: 鈥淚n the very process of being transplanted, the Negro is being transformed.鈥澛

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