Together again: the complete “Migration” series by Jacob Lawrence
Jacob Lawrence painted “The Migration of the Negro,” a series of 60 small panels describing the passage of African-Americans from the rural South to the urban North, in 1940 and 1941. The works combined the vibrancy of modernism, the content of history painting, and the urgency of political art. The electrifying results catapulted the young artist into fame and the history books.
Lawrence saw the series as a single work, but a year after its completion the Museum of Modern Art acquired the even-numbered pictures and the Phillips Collection in Washington the others, and opportunities to see all the paintings together have been rare. Which is a pity. As art critic Holland Cotter wrote in The New York Times, “…only in the complete series can we fully grasp the sinewy moral texture of art that is in the business of neither easy uplift nor single-minded protest.”
Thanks to our collaboration with both museums, Artstor users can see the whole oeuvre in the Digital Library. The series can be found organized in the right order in the curated image group, or simply search for Jacob Lawrence Migration to see all the works, as well as installation views of the exhibition at MoMA in 1995.