Edges of Ailey | Art & Artists
Sept 25, 2024–Feb 9, 2025
Edges of Ailey | Art & Artists
Black Migration
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Water is a recurring and important motif in Alvin Ailey’s choreography and writings. References to oceans and rivers denote on one hand the Middle Passage of enslavement—the violent extraction of Black people from West African countries to the Americas—and on the other the possibility of salvation through ablutions, the custom of washing one’s body or parts of it.
Moving from Texas to Los Angeles in the early 1940s, Ailey and his mother, Lula Cooper, were among the six million Black people who traveled from the rural American South to urban areas across the northern and western United States during the Great Migration. Migrants sought to escape the racial violence and economic precarity of Jim Crow apartheid policies, although rampant segregation and inequity persisted in the North.
Despite these forces, Black life and culture flourished in urban cultural hubs, and it was in Los Angeles where Ailey had his first encounters with live dance and entertainment, seeing the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, Jack Cole, and Duke Ellington, and becoming enamored with the dynamic rhythms and representation of Black dancers in Katherine Dunham’s Tropical Revue (1943). Through his high school friend turned collaborator, Carmen de Lavallade, Ailey became involved with Lester Horton, who became his mentor, as an artist and gay man, and whose racially integrated, unorthodox modern dance company deeply informed Ailey’s choreographic sensibility. In 1954 Ailey moved to New York, another epicenter of Black creativity, to begin rehearsals for the Broadway musical House of Flowers (1954).
Artists
- Terry Adkins
- Alvin Ailey
- Emma Amos
- Emma Amos
- Benny Andrews
- Benny Andrews
- Anonymous
- Antonio Lopez and Juan Ramos
- Ellsworth Ausby
- Ellsworth Ausby
- Eldren Bailey
- Richmond Barthé
- Jean-Michel Basquiat
- Romare Bearden
- Kevin Beasley
- Kevin Beasley
- Talley Beatty
- John Biggers
- John T. Biggers
- Beverly Buchanan
- Elizabeth Catlett
- Karon Davis
- Roy DeCarava
- Beauford Delaney
- Beauford Delaney
- Maya Deren
- Thornton Dial
- Thornton Dial
- Jeff Donaldson
- Aaron Douglas
- Sam Doyle
- Sam Doyle
- David Driskell
- David Driskell
- Robert Duncanson
- Robert Duncanson
- Melvin Edwards
- Melvin Edwards
- Estate of David Driskell
- Rotimi Fani-Kayode
- Rotimi Fani-Kayode
- Fon peoples
- Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller
- Charles Gaines
- Charles Gaines
- Ellen Gallagher
- Theaster Gates
- Sam Gilliam
- David Hammons
- Lyle Ashton Harris
- Maren Hassinger
- Maren Hassinger
- Palmer Hayden
- Barkley L. Hendricks
- Hector Hippolyte
- Geoffrey Holder
- Geoffrey Holder
- Lonnie Holley
- Lonnie Holley
- Clementine Hunter
- Clementine Hunter
- Hector Hyppolite
- Wadsworth Jarrell
- Rashid Johnson
- Rashid Johnson
- William H. Johnson
- William H. Johnson
- Loïs Mailou Jones
- Loïs Mailoi Jones
- Jacob Lawrence
- Ralph Lemon
- Norman Lewis
- Norman Lewis
- Samella Lewis (1923-2022)
- Samella Lewis
- Glenn Ligon
- James Little
- Antonio Lopez and Juan Ramos
- Mary Lovelace O'Neal
- Mary Lovelace O'Neal
- AI Loving
- Alvin Loving
- Kerry James Marshall
- Archibald John Motley, Jr.
- Thomas Nast
- Thomas Nast
- Senga Nengudi
- Senga Nengudi
- John Outterbridge
- Joe Overstreet
- Joe Overstreet
- Jennifer Packer
- Jennifer Packer
- Gordon Parks
- Gordon Parks
- Horace Pippin
- Noah Purifoy
- Martin Puryear
- Faith Ringgold
- Betye Saar
- Lorna Simpson
- Lorna Simpson
- Alma Thomas
- Mickalene Thomas
- Blaise Tobia
- Blaise Tobia
- Bill Traylor
- Bill Traylor
- Makers unknown
- Rubem Valentim
- Rubem Valentim
- James Van Der Zee
- Carl Van Vechten
- Kara Walker
- Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller
- Paul Waters
- Carrie Mae Weems
- Charles White
- Kandis Williams
- Kandis Williams
- Hale Aspacio Woodruff
- Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
- Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
- Purvis Young