Jacob Armstead Lawrence (September 7, 1917 – June 9, 2000) was an American
painter
Painting is a Visual arts, visual art, which is characterized by the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a solid surface (called "matrix" or "Support (art), support"). The medium is commonly applied to the base with ...
known for his portrayal of African-American historical subjects and contemporary life. Lawrence referred to his style as "dynamic
cubism", an art form popularized in Europe which drew great inspiration from West African and Meso-American art. For his compositions, Lawrence found inspiration in everyday life in Harlem. He brought the African-American experience to life using blacks and browns juxtaposed with vivid colors. He also taught and spent 16 years as a professor at the
University of Washington
The University of Washington (UW and informally U-Dub or U Dub) is a public research university in Seattle, Washington, United States. Founded in 1861, the University of Washington is one of the oldest universities on the West Coast of the Uni ...
.
Lawrence is among the best known twentieth-century African-American painters, known for his modernist illustrations of everyday life as well as narratives of African-American history and historical figures. At the age of 23 he gained national recognition with his 60-panel ''
The Migration Series'', which depicted the
Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North. The series was purchased jointly by the
Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., and the
Museum of Modern Art
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
(MoMA) in New York. Lawrence's works are in the permanent collections of numerous museums, including the
Philadelphia Museum of Art
The Philadelphia Museum of Art (PMA) is an List of art museums#North America, art museum originally chartered in 1876 for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. The main museum building was completed in 1928 on Fairmount, a hill located at ...
, the
Whitney Museum,
Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially referred to as the Met, is an Encyclopedic museum, encyclopedic art museum in New York City. By floor area, it is the List of largest museums, third-largest museum in the world and the List of larg ...
, the
Brooklyn Museum
The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum in the New York City borough (New York City), borough of Brooklyn. At , the museum is New York City's second largest and contains an art collection with around 500,000 objects. Located near the Prospect Heig ...
, the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, and the
Museum of Northwest Art. His 1947 painting ''The Builders'' hangs in the
White House
The White House is the official residence and workplace of the president of the United States. Located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest (Washington, D.C.), NW in Washington, D.C., it has served as the residence of every U.S. president ...
.
Biography
Early years

Jacob Lawrence was born September 7, 1917, in
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Atlantic City, sometimes referred to by its initials A.C., is a Jersey Shore seaside resort city (New Jersey), city in Atlantic County, New Jersey, Atlantic County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.
Atlantic City comprises the second half of ...
, where his parents had migrated from the rural south. They divorced in 1924.
[ His mother put him and his two younger siblings into foster care in Philadelphia. When he was 13, he and his siblings moved to ]New York City
New York, often called New York City (NYC), is the most populous city in the United States, located at the southern tip of New York State on one of the world's largest natural harbors. The city comprises five boroughs, each coextensive w ...
, where he reconnected with his mother in Harlem. Lawrence was introduced to art shortly after that when their mother enrolled him in after-school classes at an arts and crafts settlement house in Harlem, called Utopia Children's Center, in an effort to keep him busy. The young Lawrence often drew patterns with crayons. In the beginning, he copied the patterns of his mother's carpets.
After dropping out of school at 16, Lawrence worked in a laundromat and a printing plant. He continued with art, attending classes at the Harlem Art Workshop, taught by the noted African-American artist Charles Alston. Alston urged him to attend the Harlem Community Art Center, led by the sculptor Augusta Savage. Savage secured a scholarship to the American Artists School for Lawrence and a paid position with the Works Progress Administration
The Works Progress Administration (WPA; from 1935 to 1939, then known as the Work Projects Administration from 1939 to 1943) was an American New Deal agency that employed millions of jobseekers (mostly men who were not formally educated) to car ...
, established during the Great Depression by the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882April 12, 1945), also known as FDR, was the 32nd president of the United States, serving from 1933 until his death in 1945. He is the longest-serving U.S. president, and the only one to have served ...
. Lawrence continued his studies as well, working with Alston and Henry Bannarn, another Harlem Renaissance artist, in the Alston-Bannarn workshop. He also studied at Harlem Art Workshop in New York in 1937. Harlem provided crucial training for the majority of Black artists in the United States. Lawrence was one of the first artists trained in and by the African-American community in Harlem. Throughout his lengthy artistic career, Lawrence concentrated on exploring the history and struggles of African Americans.
The "hard, bright, brittle" aspects of Harlem
Harlem is a neighborhood in Upper Manhattan, New York City. It is bounded roughly by the Hudson River on the west; the Harlem River and 155th Street on the north; Fifth Avenue on the east; and Central Park North on the south. The greater ...
during the Great Depression
The Great Depression was a severe global economic downturn from 1929 to 1939. The period was characterized by high rates of unemployment and poverty, drastic reductions in industrial production and international trade, and widespread bank and ...
inspired Lawrence as much as the colors, shapes, and patterns inside the homes of its residents. "Even in my mother's home," Lawrence told historian Paul Karlstrom, "people of my mother's generation would decorate their homes in all sorts of color... so you'd think in terms of Matisse." He used water-based media throughout his career. Lawrence started to gain some notice for his dramatic and lively portrayals of both contemporary scenes of African-American urban life as well as historical events, all of which he depicted in crisp shapes, bright, clear colors, dynamic patterns, and through revealing posture and gestures.
Career
At the very start of his career he developed the approach that made his reputation and remained his touchstone: creating series of paintings that told a story or, less often, depicted many aspects of a subject. His first were biographical accounts of key figures of the African diaspora. He was just 21 years old when his series of 41 paintings of the Haitian general Toussaint L’Ouverture, who led the revolution of the slaves that eventually gained independence, was shown in an exhibit of African-American artists at the Baltimore Museum of Art. This was followed by a series of paintings of the lives of Harriet Tubman (1938–39) and Frederick Douglass (1939–40). His early work involved general depictions of everyday life in Harlem and also a major series dedicated to African-American history
African-American history started with the forced transportation of List of ethnic groups of Africa, Africans to North America in the 16th and 17th centuries. The European colonization of the Americas, and the resulting Atlantic slave trade, ...
(1940–1941).
His teacher Charles Alston assesses Lawrence's work in an essay for an exhibition at the Harlem YMCA 1938:
On July 24, 1941, Lawrence married the painter Gwendolyn Knight, also a student of Savage. She helped prepare the gesso panels for his paintings and contributed to the captions for the paintings in his multi-painting works.
''The Migration Series''
Lawrence completed the 60-panel set of narrative paintings entitled ''The Migration of the Negro'' or ''And the Migrants Kept Coming'', now called the '' Migration Series'', in 1940–41. The series portrayed the Great Migration, when hundreds of thousands of African Americans moved from the rural South to the urban North after World War I
World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
. Because he was working in tempera, which dries rapidly, he planned all the paintings in advance and then applied a single color wherever he was using it across all the scenes to maintain tonal consistency. Only then did he proceed to the next color. The series was exhibited at the Downtown Gallery in Greenwich Village, which made him the first African-American artist represented by a New York gallery. This brought him national recognition. Selections from this series were featured in a 1941 issue of '' Fortune''. The entire series was purchased jointly and divided by the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., which holds the odd-numbered paintings, and New York's Museum of Modern Art, which holds the even-numbered.
Another biographical series of twenty-two panels devoted to the abolitionist
Abolitionism, or the abolitionist movement, is the political movement to end slavery and liberate enslaved individuals around the world.
The first country to fully outlaw slavery was Kingdom of France, France in 1315, but it was later used ...
John Brown followed in 1941–42. When these pairings became too fragile to display, Lawrence, working on commission, recreated the paintings as a portfolio of silkscreen prints in 1977.
In 1943, Howard Devree, wrote for ''The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', that Lawrence in his next series of thirty images had "even more successfully concentrated his attention on the many-sided life of his people in Harlem". He called the set "an amazing social document" and wrote:
World War II
In October 1943, during the Second World War
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
, Lawrence was drafted into the United States Coast Guard
The United States Coast Guard (USCG) is the maritime security, search and rescue, and Admiralty law, law enforcement military branch, service branch of the armed forces of the United States. It is one of the country's eight Uniformed services ...
and served as a public affairs specialist with the first racially integrated crew on the USCGC ''Sea Cloud'', under Carlton Skinner. He continued to paint and sketch while in the Coast Guard, documenting the experience of war around the world. He produced 48 paintings during this time, all of which have been lost. He achieved the rank of petty officer third class.
Lost works
In October and November 1944, MoMA exhibited all 60 migration panels plus 8 of the paintings Lawrence created aboard the ''Sea Cloud''. He posed, still in his uniform, in front of a sign that read: "Jacob Lawrence, The Migration Series and Works Created in the US Coast Guard". The Coast Guard sent the eight paintings to exhibits around the United States. In the disorder and personnel changes that came with demobilization at the end of the war they went missing.
Post-war
In 1945, he was awarded a fellowship in the fine arts by the Guggenheim Foundation.[
In 1946, ]Josef Albers
Josef Albers ( , , ; March 19, 1888March 25, 1976) was a German-born American artist and Visual arts education, educator who is considered one of the most influential 20th-century art teachers in the United States. Born in 1888 in Bottrop, Westp ...
recruited Lawrence to join the faculty of the summer art program at Black Mountain College.
Returning to New York, Lawrence continued to paint but grew depressed; in 1949, he checked himself into Hillside Hospital in Queens, where he remained for eleven months. Painting there, he produced his Hospital Series: works that were uncharacteristic of him in their focus of his subjects' emotional states as inpatients.
Between 1954 and 1956 Lawrence produced a 30-panel series called "Struggle: From the History of the American People" that depicted historical scenes from 1775 to 1817. The series, originally planned to include sixty panels, ranges from references to current events like the 1954 Army-McCarthy hearings and relatively obscure or neglected aspects of American history, like a woman, Margaret Cochran Corbin, in combat or the wall built by unseen enslaved Blacks that protected the American forces at the Battle of New Orleans. Rather than traditional titles, Lawrence labeled each panel with a quote. He titled a panel depicting Patrick Henry's famous speech with the less well-known passage: "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery." A panel depicting an African American slave revolt is titled with the words of a man who sued for emancipation from slavery in 1773: "We have no property! We have no wives! No children! We have no city! No country!" The fraught politics of the mid-1950s prevented the series from finding a museum purchaser, and the panels had been sold to a private collector who re-sold them as individual works. Three panels (Panels 14, 20 and 29) are lost, and three others were only located in 2017, 2020, and 2021.
The Brooklyn Museum of Art
The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum in the New York City borough (New York City), borough of Brooklyn. At , the museum is New York City's second largest and contains an art collection with around 500,000 objects. Located near the Prospect Heig ...
mounted a retrospective exhibition of Lawrence's work in 1960.[ In 1969, he was among 200 Black artists in a premier show sponsored by the Philadelphia School District and the Pennsylvania Civic Center Museum. The show featured some of the top names in the country, including Ellen Powell Tiberino, Horace Pippin, Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, Barbara Bullock, Jacob Lawrence, Benny Andrews, Roland Ayers, Romare Bearden, Avel de Knight, Barkley Hendricks, Paul Keene, Raymond Saunders, Louis B. Sloan, Ed Wilson, ]Henry Ossawa Tanner
Henry Ossawa Tanner (June 21, 1859 – May 25, 1937) was an American artist who spent much of his career in France. He became the first African-American art, African-American painter to gain international acclaim. Tanner moved to Paris, France, ...
and Joshua Johnson.
Publications
Lawrence illustrated several works for children. ''Harriet and the Promised Land'' appeared in 1968 and used the series of paintings that told the story of Harriet Tubman. It was listed as one of the year's best illustrated books by ''The New York Times'' and praised by the ''Boston Globe'': "The author's artistic talents, sensitivity and insight into the black experience have resulted in a book that actually creates, within the reader, a spiritual experience." Two similar volumes based on his John Brown and Great Migration series followed. Lawrence created illustrations for a selection of 18 of Aesop's Fables
Aesop's Fables, or the Aesopica, is a collection of fables credited to Aesop, a Slavery in ancient Greece, slave and storyteller who lived in ancient Greece between 620 and 564 Before the Common Era, BCE. Of varied and unclear origins, the stor ...
for Windmill Press in 1970, and the University of Washington Press
The University of Washington Press is an American academic publishing house. The organization is a division of the University of Washington, based in Seattle. Although the division functions autonomously, it has worked to assist the university' ...
published the full set of 23 tales in 1998.
Teaching and late works
Lawrence taught at several schools after his first stint teaching at Black Mountain College, including the New School for Social Research
The New School for Social Research (NSSR), previously known as The University in Exile and The New School University, is a graduate-level educational division of The New School in New York City, United States. NSSR enrolls more than 1,000 stud ...
, the Art Students League, Pratt Institute, and the Skowhegan School. He became a visiting artist at the University of Washington in 1970 and was professor of art there from 1971 to 1986.[ He was graduate advisor there to lithographer and abstract painter James Claussen.
Shortly after moving to Washington state, Lawrence did a series of five paintings on the westward journey of African-American pioneer George Washington Bush. These paintings are now in the collection of the State of Washington History Museum.
He undertook several major commissions in this part of his career. In 1980, he completed ''Exploration'', a 40-foot-long mural made of porcelain on steel, comprising a dozen panels devoted to academic endeavor. It was installed in Howard University's Blackburn Center. The ''Washington Post'' described it as "enormously sophisticated yet wholly unpretentious " and said:
Lawrence produced another series in 1983, eight screen prints called the ''Hiroshima Series''. Commissioned to provide full-page illustrations for a new edition of a work of his choice, Lawrence chose John Hersey's ''Hiroshima'' (1946). He depicted in abstract visual language several survivors at the moment of the bombing in the midst of physical and emotional destruction.][
Lawrence's painting ''Theater'' was commissioned by the University of Washington in 1985 and installed in the main lobby of the Meany Hall for the Performing Arts.
In the early 1990s Lawrence was commissioned to paint the '' Events in the Life of Harold Washington'' mural in Chicago's Harold Washington Library.
]
Last years and death
The Whitney Museum of American Art produced an exhibition of Lawrence's entire career in 1974, as did the Seattle Art Museum in 1986.[
In 1999, he and his wife established the Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Foundation for the creation, presentation and study of American art, with a particular emphasis on work by African-American artists.] It represents their estates and maintains a searchable archive of nearly a thousand images of their work.
Lawrence continued to paint until a few weeks before his death from lung cancer on June 9, 2000, at the age of 82.[
]
Personal life
Lawrence's wife, Gwendolyn Knight, outlived him and died in 2005 at the age of 91.
Awards and honors
* 1945: Awarded a fellowship in the fine arts by the Guggenheim Foundation
* 1970: Awarded the Spingarn Medal by the NAACP
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is an American civil rights organization formed in 1909 as an interracial endeavor to advance justice for African Americans by a group including W. E. B. Du&nbs ...
for his outstanding achievements
* 1971: Elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design
* 1978: Elected a member of the National Academy of Design
* 1983: Elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
The American Academy of Arts and Letters is a 300-member honor society whose goal is to "foster, assist, and sustain excellence" in American literature, Music of the United States, music, and Visual art of the United States, art. Its fixed number ...
* 1990: Awarded the U.S. National Medal of Arts
The National Medal of Arts is an award and title created by the United States Congress in 1984, for the purpose of honoring artists and Patronage, patrons of the arts. A prestigious American honor, it is the highest honor given to artists and ar ...
* 1995: Elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences (The Academy) is one of the oldest learned societies in the United States. It was founded in 1780 during the American Revolution by John Adams, John Hancock, James Bowdoin, Andrew Oliver, and other ...
* 1996: The Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University awarded him the Algur H. Meadows Award for Excellence.
* 1998: Awarded the highest honor of Washington state, The Washington Medal of Merit
The eighteen institutions that awarded Lawrence honorary degrees include Harvard University
Harvard University is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1636 and named for its first benefactor, the History of the Puritans in North America, Puritan clergyma ...
, Yale University
Yale University is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701, Yale is the List of Colonial Colleges, third-oldest institution of higher education in the United Stat ...
, Howard University
Howard University is a private, historically black, federally chartered research university in Washington, D.C., United States. It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity" and accredited by the Mid ...
, Amherst College
Amherst College ( ) is a Private college, private Liberal arts colleges in the United States, liberal arts college in Amherst, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1821 as an attempt to relocate Williams College by its then-president Zepha ...
, and New York University
New York University (NYU) is a private university, private research university in New York City, New York, United States. Chartered in 1831 by the New York State Legislature, NYU was founded in 1832 by Albert Gallatin as a Nondenominational ...
.[
]
Legacy
''The New York Times'' described him as "one of America's leading modern figurative painters" and "among the most impassioned visual chroniclers of the African-American experience." Shortly before his death he stated: "...for me, a painting should have three things: universality, clarity and strength. Clarity and strength so that it may be aesthetically good. Universality so that it may be understood by all men."
A retrospective exhibition of Lawrence's work, planned before his death, opened at the Phillips Collection in May 2001 and travelled to the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Detroit Institute of Fine Arts, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. The exhibit was meant to coincide with the publication of ''Jacob Lawrence: Paintings, Drawings, and Murals (1935-1999), A Catalogue Raisonne''. His last commissioned public work, the mosaic mural ''New York in Transit'' made of Murano glass was installed in October 2001 in the Times Square subway station in New York City.
In 2005, ''Dixie Café'', a 1948 brush-and-ink drawing by Lawrence, was selected to suggest The Civil Rights Act of 1964
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 () is a landmark civil rights and United States labor law, labor law in the United States that outlaws discrimination based on Race (human categorization), race, Person of color, color, religion, sex, and nationa ...
in a U.S. postage stamp panel commemorating milestones of the Civil Rights Movement. The stamp sheet was called ''To Form A More Perfect Union.''
In May 2007, the White House Historical Association purchased Lawrence's ''The Builders'' (1947) at auction for $2.5 million. The painting has hung in the White House Green Room since 2009.
The Seattle Art Museum offers the Gwendolyn Knight and Jacob Lawrence Fellowship, a $10,000 award to "individuals whose original work reflects the Lawrences' concern with artistic excellence, education, mentorship and scholarship within the cultural contexts and value systems that informed their work and the work of other artists of color."
The Jacob Lawrence Gallery at the University of Washington School of Art + Art History + Design offers an annual Jacob Lawrence Legacy Residency.
His work is in the permanent collections of numerous museums, including the British Museum
The British Museum is a Museum, public museum dedicated to human history, art and culture located in the Bloomsbury area of London. Its permanent collection of eight million works is the largest in the world. It documents the story of human cu ...
, the Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially referred to as the Met, is an Encyclopedic museum, encyclopedic art museum in New York City. By floor area, it is the List of largest museums, third-largest museum in the world and the List of larg ...
, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, the Phillips Collection, the Brooklyn Museum
The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum in the New York City borough (New York City), borough of Brooklyn. At , the museum is New York City's second largest and contains an art collection with around 500,000 objects. Located near the Prospect Heig ...
, the National Gallery of Art and Reynolda House Museum of American Art, the Art Institute Chicago, the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Minnesota Museum of American Art, the Savannah College of Art and Design Museum, the Seattle Art Museum, the Birmingham Museum of Art, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the University of Michigan Museum of Art, the North Carolina Museum of Art, the Princeton University Art Museum, the Musei Vaticani, the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Saint Louis Art Museum, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Philadelphia Museum of Art
The Philadelphia Museum of Art (PMA) is an List of art museums#North America, art museum originally chartered in 1876 for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. The main museum building was completed in 1928 on Fairmount, a hill located at ...
, the Portland Art Museum, the Hudson River Museum, and The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis.
See also
* List of African-American visual artists
* List of Federal Art Project artists
References
;Further reading
* Bearden, Romare, and Henderson, Harry. ''A History of African-American Artists (From 1792 to the Present)'', pp. 293–314, Pantheon Books (Random House), 1993,
* Caro, Julie Levin, and Jeff Arnal, eds (2019). ''Between Form and Content : Perspectives on Jacob Lawrence + Black Mountain College''. Asheville, N.C.: Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center. .
*Caro, Julie Levin and Storm Janse van Rensburg, ed. (2020). ''Jacob Lawrence : Lines of Influence''. Zurich, Switzerland : Scheidegger & Spiess ; Savannah, Georgia : SCAD Museum of Art. .
*Dickerman, Leah, Elsa Smithgall, Elizabeth Alexander, Rita Dove, Nikky Finney, Terrance Hayes, Tyehimba Jess, et al. (2015). ''Jacob Lawrence : The Migration Series''. New York, New York: Museum of Modern Art. .
*Driskell, David C, and Patricia Hills. (2008). ''Jacob Lawrence : Moving Forward Paintings, 1936–1999''. New York: DC Moore Gallery. .
*Hills, Patricia (2019). ''Painting Harlem Modern : The Art of Jacob Lawrence''. Berkeley, California: University of California Press.
*
*
*Miles, J. H., Davis, J. J., Ferguson-Roberts, S. E., and Giles, R. G. (2001). ''Almanac of {{African American Heritage'', Paramus, NJ: Prentice Hall Press.
*Nesbett, Peter T, Michelle DuBois, and Patricia Hills. (2000). ''Over the Line : The Art and Life of Jacob Lawrence''. The Complete Jacob Lawrence. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press in association with Jacob Lawrence Catalogue Raisonné Project. {{ISBN, 9780295979656.
*Nesbett, Peter T., and Patricia Hills (2005). ''Jacob Lawrence : The Complete Prints (1963–2000) : A Catalogue Raisonné''. 2nd ed. Seattle, Wash.: University of Washington Press. {{ISBN, 9780295985596.
*Nesbett, Peter T., and Patricia Hills. (1994). ''Jacob Lawrence : Thirty Years of Prints (1963–1993): A Catalogue Raisonné''. Seattle: Francine Seders Gallery in association with University of Washington Press. {{ISBN, 9780295973579.
* {{cite journal , last1=Ott , first1=John , title=Battle Station MoMA: Jacob Lawrence and the Desegregation of the Armed Forces and the Art World , journal=American Art , date=September 2015 , volume=29 , issue=3 , pages=58–89 , doi=10.1086/684920 , s2cid=163759421
* {{cite journal , last1=Powell , first1=Richard J. , title=Jacob Lawrence: Keep on Movin' , journal=American Art , date=2001 , volume=15 , issue=1 , pages=90–93 , doi=10.1086/444635 , jstor=3109375 , s2cid=192169029
* {{cite journal , last1=Sheehan , first1=Tanya , title=Confronting Taboo: Photography and the Art of Jacob Lawrence , journal=American Art , date=September 2014 , volume=28 , issue=3 , pages=28–51 , doi=10.1086/679707 , s2cid=222326922
* {{cite journal , last1=Stewart , first1=Marta Reid , title=Women in the Works: A Psychobiographical Interpretation of Jacob Lawrence's Portrayal of Women as Icons of Black Modernism , journal=Source: Notes in the History of Art , date=2005 , volume=24 , issue=4 , pages=56–66 , doi=10.1086/sou.24.4.23207950 , jstor=23207950 , s2cid=191379974
* {{cite journal , last1=Stovall , first1=Lou , title=Working with Jacob Lawrence: An Elegy , journal=Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art , date=2002 , issue=36 , pages=192–198 , jstor=41808150
* {{cite journal , last1=Thompson–Dodd , first1=Jacci , title=Jacob Lawrence: Recent Work , journal=International Review of African American Art , volume=14 , issue=1 , date=January 1997 , pages=10–13
* {{cite book , title =Jacob Lawrence: The American Struggle , editor-first1= Elizabeth Hutton , editor-last1= Turner , editor-first2=Austen Barron , editor-last2=Bailly , publisher = Peabody Essex Museum , date= 2019 , isbn= 9780875772370
*Turner, Elizabeth Hutton, ed., Lonnie G Bunch III, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., et al. (1993)''. Jacob Lawrence: The Migration Series''. 1st ed. Washington, D.C.: Rappahannock Press, in association with the Phillips Collection. {{ISBN, 9780963612915.
* {{cite journal , last1=Wheat , first1=Ellen Harkins , title=Jacob Lawrence and the Legacy of Harlem , journal=Archives of American Art Journal , date=1990 , volume=30 , issue=1/4 , pages=119–126 , doi=10.1086/aaa.30.1_4.1557650 , jstor=1557650 , s2cid=192678126
*Wheat, Ellen Harkins (1991). ''Jacob Lawrence : The Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman Series of 1938–40''. Hampton, Va.: Hampton University Museum; Seattle : in association with University of Washington Press. {{ISBN, 9780961698249.
*Wheat, Ellen Harkins, and Patricia Hills (1986). ''Jacob Lawrence, American Painter''. Seattle: University of Washington Press in association with the Seattle Art Museum. {{ISBN, 9780295970110.
External links
{{Commons category, Jacob Lawrence
{{Wikiquote, Jacob Lawrence
* {{Cite web, url=http://www.moma.org/collection/artists/3418, title=Jacob Lawrence {{! MoMA, website=The Museum of Modern Art, access-date=May 13, 2016, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160514003425/http://www.moma.org/collection/artists/3418, archive-date=May 14, 2016, url-status=live
"Jacob Lawrence"
Queens Museum of Art website; includes reproductions of several prints from the '' John Brown'' series.
The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation website
works at Phillips Collection
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003122936/http://artandsocialissues.cmaohio.org/web-content/pages/race_lawrence_ins.html , date=October 3, 2011 (1937), Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio
{{Jacob Lawrence, state=expanded
{{Spingarn Medal
{{National Medal of Arts recipients 1990s
{{Authority control
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lawrence, Jacob
1917 births
2000 deaths
20th-century African-American painters
20th-century American male artists
20th-century American painters
20th-century American printmakers
African-American printmakers
American male painters
American social realist artists
American tempera painters
Art Students League of New York faculty
Black Mountain College faculty
Deaths from lung cancer in Washington (state)
Federal Art Project artists
Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
Painters from Seattle
People from Atlantic City, New Jersey
Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture alumni
United States Coast Guard non-commissioned officers
United States Coast Guard personnel of World War II
United States National Medal of Arts recipients
University of Washington faculty