Artwork Details
- Title
- Art Class
- Artist
- Date
- ca. 1939-1940
- Location
- Not on view
- Dimensions
- 32 7⁄8 x 29 in. (83.5 x 73.6 cm.)
- Credit Line
- Gift of the Harmon Foundation
- Mediums
- Mediums Description
- oil on plywood
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Object — art tool — easel
- Object — art tool — palette
- Occupation — education — student
- African American
- Figure group — female
- Object Number
- 1967.59.579
Artwork Description
In the late 1930s, William H. Johnson adopted a self-consciously “primitive” style that masked a sophisticated understanding of how to compose a picture. This image is carefully constructed so that all the parts of the painting spin off of the brilliant blue in the girl’s dress at the center of the canvas. The curved chairs, floorboards and diagonal lines of the easels create a two-dimensional pattern that Johnson filled with brilliant color. Art Class reflects Johnson’s experience teaching in a Harlem community center funded by New Deal initiatives such as the Works Progress Administration, which gave young African American artists far greater opportunities than Johnson had known just after World War I, when he was young and ambitious.