NEW YORK, NY.- Even as New Yorks museums deliver a season of exhibitions in which the Black figure is emphatically, profoundly present, these institutions are reckoning with legacies of absence, invisibility and anonymity.
Along with the bold, triumphant portraiture of Henry Taylor at the Whitney and Barkley L. Hendricks at the Frick, we have the more reticent figuration of the Guggenheims group show Going Dark: The Contemporary Figure at the Edge of Visibility, in which absent bodies may be pointed critiques or forms of resistance. And at the Met, new research and conservation efforts are drawing attention to central, yet long-neglected, Black subjects in historical paintings from the woman named Laure who modeled for the servant figure in Édouard Manets Olympia to Bélizaire, an enslaved young man of African descent whose image was only recently uncovered by conservators working on a 19th-century American group portrait.
Similar revelations abound in Unnamed Figures: Black Presence and Absence in the Early American North, a vitally important, deeply moving show currently at the American Folk Art Museum. Assembling paintings, drawings, photographs, embroideries, sculptures, ceramics and a wealth of archival material from the 17th century through the 19th century, the exhibition surrounds representations of Black individuals (as well as other works in which the Black figure is implicit) with essential, eye-opening context.
The art objects were drawn from museums, libraries and historical societies throughout the Northeast and mid-Atlantic; the lives of the subjects depicted in them have been painstakingly researched by the shows organizers, Emelie Gevalt of the American Folk Art Museum, RL Watson, an assistant professor at Lake Forest College, and Sadé Ayorinde, a predoctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Museum, as well as other scholars who contributed to the impassioned book that accompanies the exhibition.
They have combed through letters, journals and all manner of public records to identify unnamed figures and sketch out their biographies as comprehensively as possible. And where no source could be found, they have taken a cue from influential writer and professor Saidiya Hartmans concept of critical fabulation allowing themselves to imagine narratives, told from the perspective of the Black subject, that can fill in the gaps in the archive.
In choosing to focus largely on the North, as the curators explain in a wall text, they are looking beyond the more extensively documented Black history of the 19th-century South to reassert Black presence, agency, and creativity in unexpected places. The show will travel to Historic Deerfield, a Massachusetts museum, in May, but larger institutions of American art around the country ought to consider joining the tour; this is an exhibition with a lot to say about how we interpret art and material culture, and its ideas, suggestions and invitations are by no means limited by geography.
Although portraiture is at the heart of the show, it opens with landscapes works commissioned, in many cases, to show off the property of a wealthy landowner. Small Black figures are depicted in the examples here as extensions of that property, whether they were enslaved or free. In A View of Mr. Joshua Winsors House & c. (1793-95), painted by Rufus Hathaway for the Duxbury, Massachusetts, merchant and shipbuilder named in the title, a Black woman in the lower left corner of the picture stands with her back to the viewer as she approaches the hulking Winsor house on the waterfront. The curators, sifting through census records, posit that she may be the one free person of color documented as part of the Winsor household around the time the painting was made.
Her name, unfortunately, remains unknown. In another landscape, this one by famous Pennsylvanian folk artist and Quaker minister Edward Hicks (best known for the visions of interspecies harmony in his Peaceable Kingdom series of paintings), a solitary figure operating a horse-drawn plow has been tentatively identified as Caesar (a free Black man who worked on the farm where Hicks grew up.) As the curators note, he occupies a fenced-in area walled off from the white figures and animals that populate the rest of the scene.
Among the shows many examples of portraiture are works in which Black figures are shown alongside their white enslavers. These are painful images, with deliberate and crude visual hierarchies; in a pre-Revolutionary War portrait of Boston merchant Samuel Shrimpton, for instance, a young Black man has been miniaturized and relegated to the distant right background.
The curators do what they can to bring him to the foreground, zooming in on his area of the painting in an enlarged reproduction and combing the archives for clues to his identity. Poring over Shrimpton family papers and Boston court documents, they offer several possible names for this individual (he might have been Dick or Robin) and point out a detail that tells us something about his daily life: He is shown behind a writing desk, implying access to literacy (which was sometimes given to enslaved New Englanders so that they could maintain household business records).
Unnamed Figures also makes room for some rare portraits of named and celebrated Black subjects, such as Revolutionary War veteran and Stockbridge, Massachusetts, landowner Agrippa Hull (shown in a formal oil painting thought to have been made from a daguerreotype after his death) and relatively affluent husband-and-wife Bostonians William and Nancy Lawson, who in 1843 sat for a stunning and richly symbolic set of portraits by well-known artist William Matthew Prior. (Nancy Lawson is shown with her thumb between the pages of a book, a nod to education that would also have been interpreted as a desire for equality.)
An uplifting section of the exhibition, dedicated to works by Black makers, includes a stirring portrait of Baltimore minister, abolitionist, educator and author Abner Coker painted by artist Joshua Johnson, who, along with Coker, was a founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. With its sense of shared purpose and mutual recognition, this work is extremely powerful.
So are the examples of needlework in which Black women assert their presence, signing their names in thread (such as writer Ann Plato) or, in the case of Connecticut woman Sarah Ann Major Harris, recording her entire family history. Harris embroidery is particularly meaningful in light of her efforts, in 1832, to obtain an education; the school she had tried to attend was attacked by a white mob and forced to close, and a law was passed banning Connecticut schools from accepting Black children from out of town.
Unnamed Figures has many individual stories to tell, but one of the most compelling is, like Harris genealogical sampler, the story of a family that of the Halls, who were enslaved at a Maryland plantation and, over several generations, became prominent members of Baltimores free Black community.
The exhibition follows them from early-19th-century landscape paintings, in which they are shown as tiny nursemaids, stable hands and agricultural laborers on a vast estate, to meticulously styled photographic portraits from the late-19th century through the mid-20th century. Sidney Hall Davage, granddaughter of enslaved nursemaid Sib Hall, appears in the oldest of the photographs as a formidable matriarch; her high-achieving grandchildren, also pictured in the collection, included Baltimores first Black City Council member, Harry Sythe Cummings, and its first Black kindergarten teacher, Ida R. Cummings.
There is so much we still dont know about the Halls and their descendants (including, as the curators wonder, how the family members might have felt about owning a landscape painting of the plantation, given to them by their enslavers, which is among the artworks on view). But their names and legacies are now attached to images in which they have long been present, a crucial step toward ensuring that they are not just pictured but truly seen.
Unnamed Figures: Black Presence and Absence in the Early American North
Through March 24 at the American Folk Art Museum, 2 Lincoln Square, Manhattan; 212-595-9533, folkartmuseum.org
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.