Jacob Lawrence Hiroshima Signed Folio Set of 8 Silkscreen Prints

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Description

Artist: Jacob Lawrence
Title: “Hiroshima”
Medium: Silkscreen, set of 8 images in folio from John Hersey and Robert Penn Warren collection of poems entitled “Hiroshima,” illustrated by Jacob Lawrence
Framed Size: 17 3/16" x 14 1/4"
Page Size: 12 3/16" x 9 3/8"
Image Size: 12 1/2" x 9 3/8"
Year: 1983
Inscription: Binder's note and Limited Editions Club prospectus laid in, signed by Hersey, Warren, and Lawrence
Edition: 1,101 of 1,500
Condition: Very good condition overall, a few minor scuffs
Documentation: Includes Gallery Certificate of Authenticity

"Hiroshima" is a collection of 8 screenprints by Jacob Lawrence from a folio of poems by John Hersey. The folio also includes a poem later added by Robert Penn Warren and is part of an edition of 1,500.

On August 6, 1946, an atomic bomb was thrown at the Japanese city of Hiroshima, killing one hundred thousand people and changing the world as we know it. Jacob Lawrence, one of the most important visual storytellers in art history, illustrated the horrors of the event in his signature, poignant manner. Based on the accounts of six survivors, as told by John Hersey in The New Yorker, Lawrence created a series of eight paintings. In them, we see imagery of destruction and devastation, guided and informed by the artist's lifelong, commitment to the portrayal of the human condition. Piercing through the pastel color palette are the overwhelmingly terrifying faces of his figures, void of any other color but white yet filled with emotion.

The folio includes the original black aniline full top grain with colorless soil repellent finish, smooth spine, front cover blind lettered, black edges (a few minor scuffs) as well as the original publisher's black cloth slipcase, lettered on spine (some minor chipping). The Binder's note and Limited Editions Club prospectus laid in, signed by Hersey, Warren, and Lawrence. The folio set includes a gallery certificate of authenticity.


About Jacob Lawrence:

Early Life and Career

Born in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on September 7, 1917, Jacob Lawrence moved with his parents to Easton, Pennsylvania, at the age of 2. When his parents separated in 1924, his mother deposited him and his two younger siblings in foster care in Philadelphia, and went to work in New York City. When he was 13, Lawrence joined his mother in Harlem.

Lawrence was introduced to art shortly after his arrival, when his mother enrolled him in Utopia Children’s Center, which had an after-school art program. He dropped out of school at 16 but took classes at the Harlem Art Workshop with Charles Alston and frequently visited the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

In 1937, Lawrence won a scholarship to the American Artists School in New York. When he graduated in 1939, he received funding from the Works Progress Administration Federal Art Project. He had already developed his own style of modernism, and began creating narrative series, painting 30 or more paintings on one subject. He completed his best-known series, Migration of the Negro or simply The Migration Series, in 1941. The series was exhibited at Edith Halpert's Downtown Gallery in 1942, making Lawrence the first African-American to join the gallery.

World War II and After

At the outbreak of World War II, Lawrence was drafted into the United States Coast Guard. After being briefly stationed in Florida and Massachusetts, he was assigned to be the Coast Guard artist aboard a troopship, documenting the experience of war around the world. He produced 48 paintings during this time, all of which have been lost.

When his tour of duty ended, Lawrence received a Guggenheim Fellowship and painted his War Series. He was also invited by Josef Albers to teach the summer session at Black Mountain College in North Carolina. Albers reportedly hired a private train car to transport Lawrence and his wife to the college so they wouldn’t be forced to transfer to the “colored” car when the train crossed the Mason-Dixon Line.

Back in New York after his stint in the south, Lawrence continued to paint. He grew depressed, however, and in 1949, he checked himself into Hillside Hospital in Queens, where he stayed for 11 months. He painted as an inpatient, and the work created during this time differs significantly from his other work, with subdued colors and people who appear resigned or in agony.

After leaving Hillside, Lawrence turned his attention to the theater. In 1951, he painted works based on memories of performances at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. He also began teaching again, first at Pratt Institute and later the New School for Social Research and the Art Students League.

Teaching and Commissions

In 1971, Lawrence accepted a tenured position as a professor at University of Washington in Seattle, where he taught until he retired in 1986. In addition to teaching, he spent much of the rest of his life painting commissions, producing limited-edition prints to help fund nonprofits like the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Children’s Defense Fund and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. He also painted murals for the Harold Washington Center in Chicago, the University of Washington and Howard University, as well as a 72-foot mural for New York City’s Times Square subway station.

Lawrence painted until a few weeks before he died, on June 9, 2000. Personal Life Lawrence married Gwendolyn Knight, a sculptor and painter, in 1941. She actively supported his work, providing both assistance and criticism, and helped him compose captions for many of his series.

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