Self-Portrait by Malvin Gray Johnson Reproduction Print

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This 1934 Self-Potrait by Harlem Renaissance artist Malvin Gray Johnson was completed shortly before the artist's tragic passing that same year at the age of 38. Johnson’s original oil painting depicts the artist in casual dress and pose, in front of a representation of another of his works — 1932's Negro Masks. Although known for his portraits, several of Johnson's most celebrated efforts, including 1929's Swing Low Sweet Chariot and 1930's Roll Jordan Roll, are Cubist works. Though his paintings were exhibited by the Society of Independent Artists at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and acquired by the Whitney Museum among others, many were lost or neglected after his death so that now only 60 remain scattered across various collections. His passing was met with mourning from the whole Harlem Renaissance community, which until then, had regarded the much-awarded artist as among its brightest lights. This print of one of his most iconic works is reproduced by archivists in the United Kingdom using museum quality paper and ink, resulting in a colorful piece of art that is faithful to the original.

Editors' Note

Malvin Gray Johnson was an American painter, born and raised in Greensboro, North Carolina. Johnson began painting at an early age when he his sister Maggie noticed his talent and gave him drawing lessons and art supplies when he was a child. His early talent led him to win first place for his artworks in contests in his hometown's annual fairs. His family later moved to New York City, where he studied art at the National Academy of Design. His time in school was interrupted by World War I where he served in the 184th Brigade, 94th Division in France. He rose to prominence during the Harlem Renaissance, becoming one of the youngest Harlem Renaissance artists, influenced by both French Impressionism and Cubism. His work combined early modern styles with distinctly African American subjects, themes, and concerns, and was derived from studies of African sculpture, Harlem street life, and African Spirituals. He concerned himself with technical aspects of light, composition, and form, and a desire to express the experience of the spirituals in terms of abstract symbolism. His painting style is described as modernist-inspired with vigorous brushwork, intense areas of color, with flattened and angular form. Like many other artists, Johnson worked on the Federal Arts Project during the Great Depression. His work was displayed in many of the Harmon Exhibits in 1929 and the early thirties. In 1931 some of his work was hung in the Anderson gallery and the following year, the Salon of America displayed several of his paintings. In 1928 he won a prize at a Harmon exhibition, and in 1929 he won the Otto H. Kahn prize of 250 dollars for painting. Johnson was featured in the 1930s film A Study of Negro Artists, along with Richmond Barthé, James Latimer Allen, Palmer Hayden, Aaron Douglas, William Ellisworth Artis, Augusta Savage, Lois Mailou Jones, Georgette Seabrooke, and others associated with the Harlem Renaissance. Alain Locke would say that Johnson captured the cynical humor and mythical desolation in the moods of Blacks better than most artists. Towards the end of his life, in 1933, Johnson produced a group of watercolors of urban and rural African Americans, many of which were set in Brightwood, Virginia. These paintings from his final period, are widely regarded as some of his finest works.

Details

This 1934 Self-Potrait by Harlem Renaissance artist Malvin Gray Johnson was completed shortly before the artist's tragic passing that same year at the age of 38. Johnson’s original oil painting depicts the artist in casual dress and pose, in front of a representation of another of his works — 1932's Negro Masks. Although known for his portraits, several of Johnson's most celebrated efforts, including 1929's Swing Low Sweet Chariot and 1930's Roll Jordan Roll, are Cubist works. Though his paintings were exhibited by the Society of Independent Artists at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and acquired by the Whitney Museum among others, many were lost or neglected after his death so that now only 60 remain scattered across various collections. His passing was met with mourning from the whole Harlem Renaissance community, which until then, had regarded the much-awarded artist as among its brightest lights. This print of one of his most iconic works is reproduced by archivists in the United Kingdom using museum quality paper and ink, resulting in a colorful piece of art that is faithful to the original.

Editors' Note

Malvin Gray Johnson was an American painter, born and raised in Greensboro, North Carolina. Johnson began painting at an early age when he his sister Maggie noticed his talent and gave him drawing lessons and art supplies when he was a child. His early talent led him to win first place for his artworks in contests in his hometown's annual fairs. His family later moved to New York City, where he studied art at the National Academy of Design. His time in school was interrupted by World War I where he served in the 184th Brigade, 94th Division in France. He rose to prominence during the Harlem Renaissance, becoming one of the youngest Harlem Renaissance artists, influenced by both French Impressionism and Cubism. His work combined early modern styles with distinctly African American subjects, themes, and concerns, and was derived from studies of African sculpture, Harlem street life, and African Spirituals. He concerned himself with technical aspects of light, composition, and form, and a desire to express the experience of the spirituals in terms of abstract symbolism. His painting style is described as modernist-inspired with vigorous brushwork, intense areas of color, with flattened and angular form. Like many other artists, Johnson worked on the Federal Arts Project during the Great Depression. His work was displayed in many of the Harmon Exhibits in 1929 and the early thirties. In 1931 some of his work was hung in the Anderson gallery and the following year, the Salon of America displayed several of his paintings. In 1928 he won a prize at a Harmon exhibition, and in 1929 he won the Otto H. Kahn prize of 250 dollars for painting. Johnson was featured in the 1930s film A Study of Negro Artists, along with Richmond Barthé, James Latimer Allen, Palmer Hayden, Aaron Douglas, William Ellisworth Artis, Augusta Savage, Lois Mailou Jones, Georgette Seabrooke, and others associated with the Harlem Renaissance. Alain Locke would say that Johnson captured the cynical humor and mythical desolation in the moods of Blacks better than most artists. Towards the end of his life, in 1933, Johnson produced a group of watercolors of urban and rural African Americans, many of which were set in Brightwood, Virginia. These paintings from his final period, are widely regarded as some of his finest works.

 

Additional Details

Giclée Print

Custom framing options: Gloss White, Matte Black

Archival museum quality print

Printed on smooth matte fine art paper, 5.57 oz.

100% Acid free, white color

Framed in crystal clear and shatterproof acrylic panel

1.5” Mount

Sustainably printed using museum quality ink

Handmade in the UK

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Care instructions for framed piece: wipe with a dry lint free cloth

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