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Aaron Douglas Life

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Term Paper TitleAaron Douglas Life
# of Words611
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)2.44
Aaron Douglas' Life
Aaron Douglas was born on May 26, 1899 in Topeka, Kansas. Douglas' talents allowed him to become a successful muralist. He was commissioned to do the murals for the 1920 opening in the Club Ebony in Harlem. In 1929, he traveled to Chicago to create a mural for the Sherman Hotel's College Inn Ballroom. Aaron graduated with a B.A. in fine arts from the University of Nebraska in 1922. During the Harlem Renaissance, the name of Aaron Douglas was supreme as an artist among his peers and the leading writers and leading teachers of the day. The Harlem Renaissance was the work of the black novelists and poets who lived in the Harlem district of New York City during the early 1920's and '30s. Because he was able to produce illustrations for books and magazines, his services were high in demand. Douglas soon taught art at Lincoln High School in Topeka for two years until his artistic skills were critiqued enough to surpass the articulate competitive people in New York. When he arrived in New York, he started the lookout for illustration openings. Douglas was accepted as the illustrator for Dr. Alain Locke's new book, The New Negro, published in 1925. He then studied under Winold Reiss, a German illustrator, in New York from 1924 to1927. On his return to the United States in 1928, Douglas became the first president of the Harlem Artists Guild. The guild was successful in helping to get African-American artists the necessary acceptance into the arts project under the U.S. Government's Works Progress Administration (WPA). In 1934, Douglas was commissioned, under the sponsorship of the WPA, to paint a series of murals for the 135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library. The library murals attempt to give a symbolic representation to certain aspects of African-American life. F...

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