Romare Bearden The Piano Lesson Rare Exhibition Poster In Frame
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Romare Bearden, American (1911 - 1988)
The Piano Lesson (Homage to Mary Lou), 1983
Medium: Lithograph Poster
Image Size: 28 x 21.5" framed 34 x 25" Inspired by the improvisational approach of jazz music, Bearden started creating collages in 1964 that depicted African-American life in the rural South and Harlem. In these images, Bearden appropriated a technique associated with Cubism and Dada art, drawing upon cryptic symbolism from Afro-Caribbean culture to address religion, mythology, history, literature, and everyday life. He also layered these works with autobiographical elements culled from his childhood memories. Born in Charlotte, North Carolina, Bearden moved with his family to Pittsburgh when he was still a child before settling in New York. Bearden studied with George Grosz, beginning his artistic career as a social realist in the 1930s. He shifted to abstraction in the 1950s until arriving at his breakthrough collages that would establish his prominent reputation. "The Piano Lesson" is one of a series of images rooted in Bearden's memories of Mecklenburg County in North Carolina. Visually, this print was inspired by two Henri Matisse paintings - "The Piano Lesson" (1916) and "The Music Lesson" (1917). Bearden depicted a music teacher and her student in a Southern parlor. He dedicated this image to the great jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams, who, like Bearden, moved as a child from the South to Pittsburgh.
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