- James W. Washington, Jr.
James W. Washington, Jr. (
November 10 1908 -June 7 2000 [TheSocial Security Death Index lists only one James Washington who died in 2000 in Washington state; he is listed as having been issued his Social Security number in Mississippi, and these are the dates given; the November 10 birthday matches Washington's statements. However, several sources, including Harvnb|Ament|2003, give Washington's birth year as 1911.] ) was anAfrican-American painter andsculptor who grew into prominence in theSeattle, Washington art community.Susan Noyes Platt, "James W. Washington, Jr." in program for "Making a Life | Creating a World",Northwest African American Museum , 2008, an exhibit featuring works by Washington and byJacob Lawrence .]Life
Washington was born and raised in Gloster,
Mississippi , a rural mill town in the Jim Crow South.Harvnb|Ament|2003] He was one of six children ofBaptist minister James Washington and his wife Lizzie. While he was still a child, his father fled due to threats of violence, and they never met again. He began to draw at the age of 12, and apprenticed at the age of 14 to become a shoemaker, and worked a series of odd jobs. By the time he was 17, he had obtained his firstCivil Service job; he worked for the federal government intermittently until his late 50s.In 1938 he became involved with the Federal
Works Progress Administration as an assistant art instructor at the Baptist Academy inVicksburg, Mississippi . Excluded in the South from shows featuring white artists, he created a WPA-sponsored exhibition ofBlack artists, the first such in Mississippi.In 1941 Washington moved to Little Rock,
Arkansas , where his mother had already taken up residence. He worked there repairing shoes atCamp Robinson . This Civil Service job soon took him to thePacific Northwest , where he and his wife Janie Rogella Washington, "née" Miller, arrived in 1944. It was their home for the rest of their lives. Washington did electrical wiring for warships at the Bremerton,Washington Naval Base before transferring toFort Lawton in Seattle, where he set up and operated a shoe shop.He quickly became part of Seattle's then-small art community. He showed at the
Frederick and Nelson Department Store Gallery, studied underMark Tobey (who appears mostly to have encouraged him rather than taught him anything specific), and, from 1948 to 1961, curated a series of art shows at Seattle's Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Among the artists who showed there was photographerKenneth Callahan , thencurator at theSeattle Art Museum . From the time of his study with Tobey, Washington's work took on characteristics of the Northwest School, sharing characteristics with Tobey's work and that ofMorris Graves .Other artists Washington met during this period were
Fay Chong ,Andrew Chinn , Kenjiro Nomura,John Matsudaira , andGeorge Tsutakawa . He also tookUniversity of Washington extension classes with painterYvonne Twining Humber and printmakerGlen Alps .Washington and his wife lived in Seattle's Central District, near the Madison Valley; he maintained a studio in his home. From 1950 he was a member of
Artists Equity Seattle; he served as its secretary (1950–1960) and later president (1960–1962).Washington traveled to
Mexico in 1951, where he met muralistsDiego Rivera andDavid Alfaro Siqueiros and where he encountered the soft volcanic stone that would soon drive his work in the direction of sculpture; what little sculpture he had done previously was in wood. His first stone sculpture, "Young Boy of Athens" was done with a stone he picked up atTeotihuacán on the path between the Pyramid of the Sun and the Pyramid of the Moon.Works
Washington was both a painter and a sculptor. Some of his paintings also incorporate
collage . Many of his paintings depict exteriors or interiors of buildings that figured in his life, or views encountered in his travels. Others directly address the topic ofracism , such as "The Making of the UN Charter" (1945), which incorporates collaged newspaper clippings and images of body parts, and which "express [es] the concept that Blacks died for the idea of freedom inWorld War II , but were denied a place in their own country as stated inhuman rights declarations at theUnited Nations ." Similarly, his 1946 sculpture "The Chaotic Half" shows a black hand reaching for a ballot box, juxtaposed with a hooded Klansman, acrucifix , and anoose .Washington often worked on
Africa n and African-American subjects. For example, he executed asandstone sculpture ofJomo Kenyatta in 1962, and in 1969 was commissioned to execute sixgranite sculptures of famous African Americans for a "Rotunda of Achievement". His work also includes many references toFreemasonry and to biblical topics. He was a 33rd-degree Mason of the Rite Consistory, a member of Hercules Lodge no. 17.Washington explicitly considered his art to be a spiritual undertaking. "To me," he said to an interviewer on one occasion, "art is a holy land". He said of sculpting an animal, "I wait until intuition moves me, and then… I get to the point where I am the animal… I release the spiritual force into the inanimate material and animate it." When this happens, I feel like I'm working with flesh rather than just stone" Among his overtly religious works are a series of paintings from 1952, "The
Passover " (a version of theLast Supper ), a "Nativity Scene", and anencaustic of "Christ in the Garden ofGethsemane ". The last of these, which Deloris Tarzan Ament describes as "the strongest work of that series", shows "Christ at prayer amid a hail of scratched white lines and a background of dark billowing trees." One of his sculptures from the mid-1950s is entitled "Head of Job".Once Washington established himself as a sculptor, his preferred sculptural material was granite. Scholars have compared his early sculptural work to prehistoric Mediterranean pieces, but its simplicity and power also fit within the tradition of reductive modern sculpture.
House and studio
Since 1992, Washington's house and studio at 1816 26th Avenue have had official status as a Seattle city landmark. [ [http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/ABPub/collections/video/2004251432_washingtonhouse02/2004251441_washingtonhouse.html Video tour of James W. Washington Jr.'s residence] , "Seattle Times" online. Accessed online 20 March 2008.] [ [http://www.jameswashington.org/studio.pl/Timeline_of_Dr._Washington The Timeline of Dr. James W. Washington, Jr.] , James W. Washington, Jr. and Janie Rogella Washington Foundation. Accessed online 20 March 2008.]
Notes
References
* Citation
last =Ament
first =Deloris Tarzan
author-link =
date =2003-03-01
year =2003
title =Washington, James Jr. (1911-2000): Art as Holy Land
place =Seattle
publisher =HistoryLink
url =http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=5328
accessdate =2008-03-18, excerpted from Citation
last =Ament
first =Deloris Tarzan
year =2002
title =Iridescent Light: The Emergence of Northwest Art
place =Seattle
publisher =University of Washington Press
isbn =.External links
* [http://www.jameswashington.org/studio.pl The Washington House, Studio and Garden] , website of the James W. Washington, Jr. and Janie Rogella Washington Foundation. Includes images of several paintings and sculptures, with commentary.
* [http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/ABPub/collections/video/2004251432_washingtonhouse02/2004251441_washingtonhouse.html Video tour of James W. Washington Jr.'s residence] , "Seattle Times" online. Includes many photos of Washington and his work.
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