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Early U.S. Modernism and The Harlem Renaissance. From Visual Arts to Texts. In the News. Affordable Care Act. Death of Adrienne Rich. Link to Rich reading a poem. Survey: Affordable Care Act. Should the Supreme Court A. Leave the Affordable Car Act As It Is (Take No Action)
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Early U.S. Modernism and The Harlem Renaissance From Visual Arts to Texts
In the News Affordable Care Act Death of Adrienne Rich Link to Rich reading a poem
Survey: Affordable Care Act • Should the Supreme Court • A. Leave the Affordable Car Act As It Is (Take No Action) • B. Strike down the individual health care mandate but keep the rest of the Affordable Care Act • C. Stike down the whole law
Robert Henries Jacob Riis George Bellows Frank Lloyd Wright Identify the artist: Jacob RiisFive Cents a Spot 1890
European Modernism Precisionism Ash Can School Hudson River School Identify the movement / period: George Bellows Excavation of Pennsylvania Station 1909
Early American Modernism Precisionism The Ash Can School Hudson River School Hughes would describe these paintings as examples of: Joseph Stella. The Voice of the City of New York Interpreted: The Bridge, 1920 Georgia O’Keefe, The Radiator Building—Night, New York, 1927
Paintings by John Marin Brooklyn Bridge, 1910 Movement Fifth Avenue, 1912
Early American Modernism Precisionism The Ash Can School Hudson River School Hughes would describe these paintings as examples of: Charles Sheeler, American Landscape, 1930
Defining Renaissance For my part I was deeply stirred by the idea of a real Negro renaissance…My idea of a renaissance was one of talented persons of an ethnic or national group working individually or collectively in a common purpose and creating things that would be typical of their group. I was surprised when I discovered that many of the talented Negroes regarded their renaissance more as an uplift organization and a vehicle to accelerate the pace and progress of smart Negro society. • Langston Hughes • Alain Locke • Claude McKay • Joel A Rodgers
American Identity America, seeking a new spiritual expansion and artistic maturity, trying to found an American literature, a national art, and national music implies a Negro-American culture seeking the same satisfactions and objectives. Separate as it may be in color and substance, the culture of the Negro is of a pattern integral with the times and with its cultural setting. • Langston Hughes • Alain Locke • Claude McKay • Joel A Rodgers
Jazz and What It Means Jazz isn’t music merely, it is a spirit that can express itself in almost anything. The true spirit of jazz is a joyous revolt from convention, custom, authority, boredom, even sorrow—from everything that would confine the soul of man and hinder its riding free on the air. The Negroes who invented it called their songs the “Blues,” and they weren’t capable of satire or deception. Jazz was their explosive attempt to cast off the blues and be happy, carefree happy, even in the midst of sordidness and sorrow. And that is why it has been such a balm for modern ennui, and has become a safety valve for modern machine-ridden and convention-bound society. It is the revolt of the emotions against repression. • Langston Hughes • Alain Locke • Claude McKay • Joel A Rodgers