Artwork Page for Jitterbugs III (recto)

Details / Information for Jitterbugs III (recto)

Jitterbugs III (recto)

c. 1941
(American, 1901–1970)
Culture
America
Support
Paperboard/thin cardboard
Measurements
Sheet: 40.6 x 27.9 cm (16 x 11 in.); Image: 34.7 x 25.5 cm (13 11/16 x 10 1/16 in.)
Copyright
Copyright
This artwork is known to be under copyright.
Location
Not on view

Description

African American artist William H. Johnson’s screenprint presents dancers enjoying the jitterbug, a dance craze that came out of Harlem, a predominantly African American neighborhood of Manhattan, just before World War II. The smartly dressed couple dances enthusiastically at one of Harlem’s popular nightclubs—perhaps the famous Savoy Ballroom—while hints of live music appear in the form of two trumpet bells and piano keys. The sharp angles and kinetic stripes of the floor emphasize the dancers’ fast pace. At the time, screenprinting was used as a commercial printing method and rarely for fine art. Johnson’s technique, which he taught at the Harlem Community Art Center, includes the flat tonal areas typical of the medium.
A colorful vertically oriented screenprint depicts two abstract figures with medium-dark skin tones, open mouths revealing white teeth, and rounded organic heads. Their clothes are angular shapes. A woman in a yellow top and dark blue skirt arches left in green and orange heels. A man in a dark green jacket and purple trousers leans over her in orange shoes. Diagonal floor lines and a small bench appear against the light gray background.

Jitterbugs III (recto)

c. 1941

William Henry Johnson

(American, 1901–1970)
America

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