The Founding of Chicago, Aaron Douglas

Artwork Overview

1899–1979
The Founding of Chicago, circa 1933
Where object was made: United States
Material/technique: paperboard; gouache
Dimensions:
Image Dimensions Height/Width (Height x Width): 37.47 x 31.43 cm
Image Dimensions Height/Width (Height x Width): 14 3/4 x 12 3/8 in
Frame Dimensions (Height x Width x Depth): 24 1/2 x 21 1/2 x 1 in
Weight (Weight): 7 lbs
Credit line: Museum purchase: R. Charles and Mary Margaret Clevenger Fund
Accession number: 2006.0027
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

Exhibition Label:
"Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist," 2007-08, Susan Earle
The Founding of Chicago articulates powerful ideas about the often uncelebrated role of African Americans in the building of American cities. Chicago is a particularly interesting example, since it was founded by a fur trader from Haiti, Jean-Baptiste Pointe du Sable. He is portrayed here with a shovel and coonskin cap, emerging from a rural setting with an enchained mother and her baby. Architectural emblems rise in the distance symbolizing the promise and the future of urban life in the North.

Douglas’s gouache probably dates to the time of the important American Negro Exposition in Chicago in 1940, and it may be the surviving sketch for a mural intended for this exhibition. A modernist allegory, the painting indicates the clarity with which Douglas understood the reverberations of history.

Exhibitions