Romare Bearden The Dove 1964

  • MoMA, Floor 4, 416 The David Geffen Galleries

In 1964, after three decades of living and working in Harlem, Bearden took up collage, cutting and combining found images and photographs to achieve new combinations defined by their fragmentation, texture, and layered depth. He used this approach to capture the complex facets of Black experience in the United States, often depicting scenes from everyday life in the rural South, which many African Americans left to move to northern cities during the Great Migration (1916–70), and scenes from Harlem. Throughout his career, Bearden reworked his own images in different mediums, including this collage, which is shown alongside a later photo reproduction.

Gallery label from 2022
Medium
Cut-and-pasted printed paper, gouache, pencil, and colored pencil on board
Dimensions
13 3/8 x 18 3/4" (33.8 x 47.5 cm)
Credit
Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fund
Object number
377.1971
Copyright
© Romare Bearden Foundation/VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Department
Drawings and Prints

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