The Art of Romare Bearden: A Resource for Teachers  
   
Coda: Artist to Artist Method Artistic and Literary Sources Music A Leader in the Arts Community Memories Biography Bearden at a Glance

A Leader in the Arts Community     2 of 2 

Working in Black and White

After the formation of Spiral, Bearden concentrated on collage and, at the suggestion of a colleague, began to enlarge them photostatically. These black-and-white enlargements, later called Projections, earned him critical success. However, Bearden's exploration of photomechanical processes predates his Projections. In the 1950s, he systematically copied the works of old master painters as a means of improving his own artistic skills. He took reproductions of paintings to a photography studio, had them enlarged in black and white, and substituted his own color schemes for the originals. Bearden explained: "I did that with Giotto, Duccio, Veronese, Rembrandt—right on up to Monet. I spent three years copying." Studying these black-and-white reproductions informed his understanding of composition, and he began to think about color independent of form.
Bearden's black-and-white photostats of old master paintings have been described as "dark-skinned art history." Although he felt that he would benefit by studying works by the great painters of Western art, he was also struck by the fact that nearly all the figures depicted were white. Bearden recognized the power of the photostatic process to change white figures into black. He used this artistic strategy of race-reversal throughout his career, fusing his African-American heritage with the icons and archetypes of Western cultural history. It was one of his most effective tools for creating imagery at once personal and universal.

Activity: Study Art Like Bearden
Positive and negative photostatic reproductions, Poussin, The Feeding of the Child Jupiter, c. 1640
Postive and negative photostatic reproductions. Nicolas Poussin, French 1594-1665, The Feeding of the Child Jupiter, c. 1640. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Samuel H. Kress Collection


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