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Portfolios%3D%22594%22%20and%20Disp_Obj_Type%3D%22Print%22%20and%20Sort_Artist%3D%22Lawrence,%20Jacob%22
Print
The 1920's... The Migrants Arrive and Cast Their Ballots
Jacob Lawrence, 1917 - 2000
Lawrence, Jacob
United States
1917 - 2000
Male
34 3/8 x 26 in. (87.3 x 66 cm)
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overall
vertical
image
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sheet
Printer's ink
Printer's ink
1974
1974
1974
1900-2000, 20th century, Images of Black People, politics in art, serigraphs, Social Realism
Print
In 1975, Jacob Lawrence and twelve other artists were asked to respond to the question, "What does independence mean to me?" The prints made by the artists comprise the Kent Bicentennial Portfolio: Spirit of Independence, commissioned in honor of the American Bicentennial.
Jacob Lawrence's parents migrated from the south to New York City, so the theme of migration was one that had great meaning to his personal history. He said, "During the post World War I period millions of black people left southern communities in the United States and migrated to northern cities. This migration reached its peak during the 1920's. Among the many advantages the migrants found in the north was the freedom to vote. In my print, migrants are represented expressing that freedom."
[Gallery label text]
lower rightlower centerlower rightlower right
Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence
1975.120.8
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
glossy
8x10
00/00/00
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negative
4x5
00/00/00
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75.120.8DI1
digital image
7/22/2004
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/75.120.8_A1.jpg