Tributes to Beauford About Beauford Delaney Tributes to Beauford About Beauford Delaney

Beauford in The Art of the Affair

A couple of weeks ago, I reported that Forsyth Harmon created a beautiful watercolor portrait of Beauford for a book called The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence by Catherine Lacey.

Beauford Delaney
(2017) Watercolor on paper
Forsyth Harmon

I reached out to Harmon to learn more about the book and her portrait of Beauford, and she graciously granted Les Amis the interview below.

Les Amis: Amazon lists you as an author on The Art of the Affair alongside Catherine Lacey. How much of the writing did you contribute to this book in addition to your wonderful illustrations?

FH: The Art of the Affair grew from a piece Catherine Lacey contributed to The Believer magazine. The concept was Catherine's, however she and I worked together to co-curate the relationship chains between turn of the century writers, artists, musicians, and more. Catherine did the writing, and I did the illustrations. The process was very collaborative, and a lot of fun. I learned so much.

Les Amis: What story does the book tell about Beauford Delaney?

FH: Beauford is featured in Chapter Five of The Art of the Affair--a section entitled "The Way Your Blood Beats." He appears as an important artist of his time, and one of only the two persons Georgia O'Keefe ever drew. The book also calls attention to the ways in which he inspired James Baldwin, who called him "the first living proof, for me, that a black man could be an artist," and "a cross between Brer Rabbit and St. Francis of Assisi." Beauford helped James find a way to pay for his father's funeral when he was still a teenager. They later traveled together in Europe.

Book spread from The Art of the Affair
Image courtesy of Forsyth Harmon

Les Amis: Did you decide to include him in the book or did Catherine Lacey?

FH: I can't recall which of us pulled in Beauford! I do remember curating this chapter in Catherine's Fort Greene apartment over dinner. It was a wonderful night!

Les Amis: What inspired you and / or Lacey to include him in the book?

FH: As a portrait artist myself, I have always been a fan of Beauford's work. It wasn't until later in life that I realized an organization founded by my family, The Harmon Foundation, had frequently exhibited his early pastel portraits during the1930s and 1940s. The Foundation supported a variety of causes, but is best known for having served as a patron of African-American art during the Harlem Renaissance, helping African-American artists gain the recognition they deserved.

Les Amis: What inspired your watercolor of Beauford? Was it a photo portrait, one of his self-portraits ... ?

FH: I generally use multiple sources to inspire my portraits. In this case, I used a combination of photographs and Beauford's self-portraits, but was probably most inspired by a photograph taken by Rue Guilleminot in France in 1973. I did my best to capture his expression in this photograph ... knowing, bemused, and perhaps a bit exhausted.

Beauford Delaney
Rue Guilleminot
France 1973
© Errol Sawyer

Les Amis: You are donating the proceeds from the sale of your Beauford Delaney portrait to support the library at the A. J. William-Myers African Roots Center. What is your relationship with the center?

FH: I am local to the A. J. William-Myers African Roots Center, which is headquartered in Kingston, New York. I've been inspired by the work the organization does around literacy and the advancement of historical knowledge, cultural enrichment, civic engagement and social justice. Over the past two years, The Harmon Foundation has included the center in its annual funding disbursement at my direction.

Les Amis: Has anyone purchased the portrait of Beauford, allowing you to donate to the Center?

FH: I am making the donation.

Les Amis: How well do you know Beauford's work?

FH: I'm not an expert! Although now I'm inspired to learn more.

Les Amis: What, if anything, about it inspires you?

FH: I find so much movement and depth of emotion in his portraits especially. The subject paint application embodies a lot of energy, and the background washes feel almost auric, creating a kind of halo. I feel they offer true access into the subject's internal state.

Les Amis: Are there any final thoughts you'd like to share?

FH: Just gratitude for the opportunity to support the A. J. William-Myers African Roots Center by celebrating Beauford Delaney. Thank you!

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Istanbul Calling - A Recordbreaking Sale

On Octobr 14, 2022, Christie's London hosted a Post-War & Contemporary Art Day auction under the umbrella title "Istanbul Calling" to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İKSV) and benefit the institution’s new Young Artists Fund.

As I reported on October 1, two Beauford Delaney portraits belonging to the estate of Turkish actress, theater director and owner, author, and television media personality Gülriz Sururi were put up for sale during this auction.

The estimated sale price of the Sururi portrait was 150,000-200,000 GBP.


Gülriz Sururi
(1966) oil on canvas
39 3/8 x 29 7/8in. (100 x 76cm.)
Signed and dated 'Beauford Delaney 1966' (lower left)

© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

It sold for 189,000 GBP ($211,883), including Buyer's Premium.

The estimated sale price of the Baldwin portrait was 180,000-230,000 GBP.

James Baldwin
(1966) oil on canvas
39 1/2 x 29 7/8in. (100.2 x 76cm.
)
signed and dated 'Beauford Delaney 1966' (lower left)
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

It sold for 1,026,000 GBP ($1,150,114), including Buyer's Premium.

Christie's describes this as "the top price of the afternoon" for the auction. It names Beauford as one of three artists who "lead Christie’s 20th/21st Century Frieze Week season in London".

The auction house also declared the sale price of the Baldwin portrait "a record price for the artist." It identifies the hightest price that a Beauford Delaney fetched at auction prior to Istanbul Calling was the untitled 1948 painting, subtitled Village Street Scene, which sold for $557,000, including Buyer's Premium, at Swann Auction Galleries' African American Fine Art Sale in April 2018.
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Beauford Delaney News

Here are a few tidbits of news about Beauford's work, gathered from a Google search a few days ago.

New Orleans Auction Galleries Sale

On October 9, 2022, New Orleans Auction Galleries sold the untitled Beauford Delaney gouache on paper pictured below for $17,500.

Untitled
(1969) Gouache on paper
Sheet 8-1/2" x 6-1/4", framed 14-1/4" x 11-3/4"
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Beauford at the Art Institute of Chicago

Beauford's iconic 1944 self-portrait and Norman Lewis' Multitudes are being juxtaposed with several closed-form sculptures by Toshiko Takaezu in Gallery 262 at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Self-portrait
(1944) Oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
By permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Find an image of the display here: https://www.artic.edu/highlights/49/a-aapi-artists

Watercolor Portrait of Beauford Delaney Being Sold for Charity

Portrait of Beauford Delaney
(2017) Watercolor on paper
Forsyth Harmon

You'll find this beautiful portrait of Beauford in a book called The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence by Catherine Lacey.

Forsyth Harmon is selling the portrait for $150 and has pledged to donate all proceeds to the Library at the A.J. Williams-Myers African Roots Center, an organization that promotes literacy through teaching and learning about the African roots experience, including history and culture, through a dynamic exchange of information, ideas, and creativity.

Find information and purchase the work here: https://forsythharmon.com/Beauford-Delaney

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Sold and To Be Sold 2

SOLD

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about the impending auction of Beauford's Ciel (Sky) color screenprint no. 22/36 by Swann Auction Galleries. 

Ciel (Sky)
(1960) Color screenprint
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered 22/36 in pencil, lower margin
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

The sale took place on October 6, 2022, and the piece sold for $10,000, including Buyer's Premium. 

TO BE SOLD

On October 9, 2022, New Orleans Auction Galleries will offer an untitled Beauford Delaney gouache on paper for sale during a two-day estates auction.  

Untitled
(1969) Gouache on paper
Sheet 8-1/2" x 6-1/4", framed 14-1/4" x 11-3/4"
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

They describe the work (Lot 109) as follows:

"In this later abstract work by Delaney, the artist employs a limited yet sophisticated color palette of vivid hues to create an almost rhythmic exploration of the interplay of color and form."

This signed, framed work is estimated to sell for $15,000 to $25,000. 

 
Untitled (detail)
(1969) Gouache on paper
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

For information about this sale, click HERE.

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Sale of Beauford Delaney Portraits to Support Charitable Causes

Over the years, I've published three articles about the time Beauford spent in Istanbul:

Beauford and Baldwin in Istanbul

Beauford in Istanbul

Sedat Pakay's Tribute to Beauford

A few days ago, I learned that two works created by Beauford during this sojourn are being auctioned for charity.

Christie's London is hosting two auctions under the umbrella title "Istanbul Calling" to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İKSV) and benefit the institution’s new Young Artists Fund.  The sales catalog states that "Highlights include two enchanting portraits by Beauford Delaney painted in Turkey and held in the same private collection since 1966..." 

That collection belongs to the estate of Gülriz Sururi (1929-2018), a Turkish actress, theater director and owner, author, and television media personality. She and her husband, actor Engin Cezzar (1935-2017), were dear friends of James Baldwin. Beauford met the couple during his 1966 visit to Istanbul.

The portraits portray James Baldwin (Lot 287) and Gülriz Sururi (Lot 288).

Screenshot from Christie's Website

Find vibrant images of these portraits and read the lot essays about them on Christie's Website at the links below:

James Baldwin

Gülriz Sururi

The Baldwin portrait is one of two that Beauford created while in Istanbul.  It is one of the "softest" I've seen in terms of the palette Beauford chose to use in portraying his friend.  The estimated sale price of this work is $210,000-$290,000.

The Sururi portrait is another example of Beauford's passion for portraying his subjects in luminous yellow.  The estimated sale price of this work is $180,000-$230,000.

Both portraits will be sold during the Post-War & Contemporary Art Day Sale on Friday 14 October 2022. The Sururi Estate plans to donate 80% of their net proceeds of sale to Çağdaş Yaşamı Destekleme Derneği (Association for the Support of Contemporary Living), a non-profit NGO in Turkey, and the remaining 20% of their net proceeds of sale to İKSV. The Association for the Support of Contemporary Living helps girls across Turkey to obtain an education.

For more information about the sale, click HERE.

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Sold and To Be Sold

 SOLD 

Thomaston Place Auction Galleries of Thomaston, Maine held a three-day live auction called August Splendor 2022 last month. On Day 3 - August 28, 2022 - it offered a Beauford Delaney untitled, undated abstract for sale.

Untitled
(Undated) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney,
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

The online catalog describes the painting as follows:

"Color Composition, impasto oil on canvas, signed lower right, a blended confetti of pale teal, pink and yellow, unframed, SS: 28 3/4" x 23 1/2", very good condition."

The colors in this work remind me of the ones Beauford used in the more vibrantly colored abstract that the Mint Museum purchased a few years ago.

Untitled
(1959) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

The estimated sale price for the work offered by Thomaston Place Galleries was $20,000 to $30,000. It sold for $85,000.

The Cleveland Museum of Art has acquired Untitled (ca. 1958), a nearly 5' x 4' oil on canvas as part of its move to increase the number of works in its collection that were created by African American artists.

Untitled
(c. 1958) Oil on canvas
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
 
The museum describes the painting as one of Beauford's "finest and most exuberant achievements."

TO BE SOLD

On October 6, 2022, Swann Auction Galleries will auction Beauford's Ciel, a color screenprint for which 36 prints were made, as Lot number 46. 

Ciel (Sky)
(1960) Color screenprint
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered 22/36 in pencil, lower margin
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Ciel is mentioned in two previous articles on the Les Amis blog:

Where to Find Beauford's Art: Ink Miama Art Fair - Aaron Galleries

Where to Find Beauford's Art: Minneapolis Institute of Arts

An image of MIA's print appears in the catalog entitled Beauford Delaney: From New York to Paris, published for the museum's 2004 exhibition of the same name.

The estimated sale price for Ciel (Sky) Print no. 22/36 is $10,000 - $15,000.

For information about Swann's sale, click HERE.

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Beauford on Obelisk Art History

I occasionally Google Beauford to see what obscure references to his life and art I can find online. Earlier this week, I found a delightful one - a page on a Website called Obelisk Art History.

Obelisk, formerly known as Trivium, is "a place to explore the wildly diverse world of art history." Created by Reed Enger 10+ years ago, it has evolved from a simple classroom resource to a platform with thousands of images, essays, correspondence, projects, and quizzes for those interested in art history.

In the section called "Artists," Enger has built a page called "Beauford Delaney: Capturing the Sacred Light." It features two sentences about Beauford and images of five of his works, most of which are dominated by the color "yellow." The sentences contain links to four other pages on the site, three of which link back to Beauford's page. Clicking on each image takes you to a page dedicated to the corresponding work, and this page also presents a brief paragraph that contains links to additional pages.

Through an innovative function called "The Kaleidoscope," Enger invites visitors to the site to take "a hypnotic journey through art history." On any given page that features a work of art, you'll find a rotating "gear" between the images of the work and the text describing it. Click on it, and you're taken to a new page where the work is transformed into a constantly changing pattern reminiscent of a kaleidoscope. This is absolutely mesmerizing!

Enger selected two abstracts and three portraits for "Capturing the Sacred Light." Here are a few screenshots of the kaleidoscopic images from these works.

Kaleidoscope - Portrait of Howard Swanson
Kaleidoscope - Composition 16
Kaleidoscope - Portrait of Marian Anderson
Kaleidoscope - Abstraction No. 4
Kaleidoscope - Portrait of James Baldwin

I'd love to hear your thoughts about this way this site transforms images of artwork from classical to contemporary into ever changing geometric forms. Write to me at amisdebeauford@yahoo.com to let me know!

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Beauford's Studio as Described by Larry Calcagno

Beauford met Larry Calcagno in Paris soon after Beauford's arrival, and the two men became dear friends. They frequently exchanged letters through which they conveyed not only the details of their daily lives, but also their love for each other. 

Calcagno was a painter and as such, he was acutely sensitive to the environment in which Beauford created his art. In a handwritten document, he described Beauford's studio as follows: 

"Beauford Delaney paints with joy each day, sitting beneath an enormous potted tree in his studio in Paris. A white island shining in a grey sea, it is filled with his inner light. Walls, floor, bed and chair, stacks of paintings and memorabilia — all covered with white — draperies, bedsheets, paper, a white shroud ... 

"He puts everything away, literally out of sight — the past, the world, painful histories, frustration, and suffering. He paints with an enormous faith and serenity those he loves, who love him; in his world of white — [indecipherable] moves in a world of new beginnings."

Though Calcagno's document is undated, his description of the tree in the studio implies that he is describing the creative space at Beauford's rue Vercingétorix apartment.
Beauford at his rue Vercingétorix studio
Screenshot from Henry Miller vu par ses amis
 
Beauford moved to this address long after Calcagno left Paris, and Calcagno visited him there in 1966 and 1972.

I found this document touching because of Calcagno's description of the emotional state he felt Beauford experienced in painting.  Whether he thought Beauford summoned his faith to achieve serenity in order to paint the people he loved, or that Beauford's faith was strengthened and serenity achieved by the act of painting them, we cannot know.

Find additional posts about Beauford and Larry Calcagno at the links below:

Beauford and Larry Calcagno

Beauford and Larry Calcagno: The Letters 

Larry Calcagno's Portrait of Beauford 

Beauford in Spain 

Larry Calcagno's Portrait of Beauford 

A Boundless Love: Beauford's Letters to Larry Calcagno

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One Good Beauford Story Inspired Another

On July 2, 2022, I published a post about a splendid article that Scalawag Magazine published about Beauford.

Today, I'm sharing the backstory regarding this article. 

Elaine Lee is one of America’s leading experts on travel. A San Francisco/Bay Area-based journalist, she has visited 65 countries and completed two solo trips around the world. She is the editor of “Go Girl” The Black Woman's Book of Travel and Adventure," and her website, ugogurl.com, is a leading portal for information on black travel, black travel writing and travel media information. She and I have known each other for many years. 

I subscribe to the UGoGirl newsletter, and on Wednesday, August 31, I was thrilled to receive the message below (reprinted with permission). It is entitled "My Story about Delaney Didn't Make It to Press, but at Least I Inspired Another":

Greetings!

I hope this email finds you well. 
When I visited Paris in 2019, I attended a play called Amazing Grace is Yellow – the Life of Beauford Delaney, Painter, written by Silver Wainhouse. Afterward, I spoke to Monique about the play as well as the documentary that she and Zach (Miller) were working on. I offered to write an article to help publicize their project and the growing resurgence of interest in Delaney's work.

I designed a pitch and sent it everywhere I could think of.  I got nowhere - until I contacted Scalawag magazine, whose editor asked to see the story. Though she did not like it, she liked the idea and assigned the project to another writer, Tyra Seals, who did a fabulous job. 
Photo courtesy of Darthea Speyer Gallery

Even though my story about Delaney didn't make it to press, at least I inspired a magazine editor and another writer to carry out the project. There's no such thing as a small victory!

Below is the link to the story:

Out of the Shadows: The Queer Life of Artist Beauford Delaney
I am grateful to Elaine Lee for her grace and humility in sharing this story with her audience and for allowing me to share it with you!
Elaine Lee at Amazing Grace is Yellow
© Entrée to Black Paris
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Summertime ...

... and the livin' is easy.

Les Amis de Beauford Delaney is taking a summertime break to do some "easy living" over the next few weeks.

As you navigate the heat of the season, I hope you enjoy these rich, warm images of several of Beauford's yellow abstract works and this beautiful rendition of the song "Summertime" by Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong.

Untitled (Abstraction)
(1964) Oil on linen canvas
National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington, D.C.
Photo courtesy of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
© Estate of Beauford Delaney,
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
 
 

Untitled
(1967) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney,
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator


Abstraction No. 4

(ca. 1965) Oil on canvas
signed 'Beauford Delaney' (upper right)
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
 
 
Untitled
(1961) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
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Beauford and Elwood Peterson

Elwood Peterson lived in Paris for over 15 years, arriving two to three years before Beauford set sail for France in 1953. A classical singer who used GI Bill benefits to train at the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris, he met Beauford in 1956 through an introduction by their mutual friend, composer Howard Swanson.

Negro Spirituals - promotional graphic
Fair use claim

Biographer David Leeming mentions Peterson several times in Amazing Grace: A Life of Beauford Delaney. Several elements in the Beauford Delaney archive now held by the University of Tennessee Knoxville illuminate the relationship between the two men.

Leeming states that Beauford was greatly pleased by a concert in which Peterson performed in Fall/Winter 1962. The archive contains a note handwritten by Beauford, which says "Thursday Elwood Howard" and "concert du next week negro. Beauford wrote "Oct 13," "Dec am centre," and the words "apre [sic] midi" (afternoon) and "evening" on this note, as well as other unrelated information.

The archive also includes Peterson's handwritten invitation to Beauford to "come to the Center to see our opera" and an accompanying envelope postmarked November 21, 1962. In the invitation, Peterson notes that "Howard" (Swanson) has seen the opera and will attend the performance a second time and mentions that he has not yet been able to visit Beauford in his new home (the studio on rue Vercingétorix). He says he'll try to send Beauford a formal invitation to the event.

Handwritten invitation to opera - detail
Photo by Les Amis de Beauford Delaney

I found the following quotation in a card Peterson sent to Beauford, most likely during the Christmas season of 1966*:

"You were off galavanting again when I was "called" to teach in California ....

"I pray all is well with you and trust that all works so that we may see each other again next summer. I mean yet to have a Beauford Delaney on my wall!"

In 1967, Beauford painted a portrait of Peterson and gave it to his subject.

Elwood Peterson
(1967) Oil on canvas
© The Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
Photo from Amazing Grace: A Life of Beauford Delaney

According to Leeming, Peterson expressed surprise at the youthful countenance Beauford bestowed on him in the work, to which Beauford replied:

"... when you sing you become eighteen again, and that's what I wanted to capture."

I have not read any correspondence that Beauford addressed to Peterson. But it is apparent from Peterson's notes and letters to Beauford that he held Beauford in high esteem and felt close to him. For several of the writings held in the archive, he used the closing salutation "Bless you" or "Love."

*In September 1966, Jet Magazine reported that Peterson left Paris to accept a position at Pomona College in Claremont, California.

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Beauford Featured in Scalawag Magazine

"Through journalism and storytelling, Scalawag works in solidarity with oppressed communities in the South to disrupt and shift the narratives that keep power and wealth in the hands of the few. Collectively, we pursue a more liberated South."

This is the mission statement of Scalawag Magazine, a Black-led, women run, nonprofit media outlet in Durham, NC that publishes works focused on Southern politics and culture. Launched through a Kickstarter campaign in 2015, its founders intend to challenge the status quo of the South through community-based journalism. One of the four values listed on its "About" page is "Radical imagination and creativity," which is a perfect descriptor for Beauford's art.

On June 29, 2022, Scalawag published a feature article about Beauford called "Out of the Shadows: The Queer Life of Artist Beauford Delaney." It was written by Tyra A. Seals, the independent research assistant at the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery who conducted archival research and developed the most updated existing chronology about Beauford Delaney for the MRG exhibition entitled Be Your Wonderful Self: The Portraits of Beauford Delaney.

Seals interviewed me for this article, and I was pleased to contribute the "before and after" photos of Beauford's grave that illustrate it.

Read the article HERE.

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Beauford and Ted Joans

Surrealist poet and painter Ted Joans was acquainted with Beauford and wrote about him at least twice.

Where and when they first met, I do not know. I am aware of three encounters in Paris.

Joans was born in Cairo, Illinois and grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana and Louisville, Kentucky. After completing a Bachelor of Arts degree at Indiana University, he moved to NYC in 1951 and became involved with the Beat Generation in Greenwich Village. Beauford was living in Greenwich Village at that time and had already become somewhat of a local celebrity, so it is possible that the two men met there.

Joans began traveling to Paris in 1960 and visited the city many times during the following two decades. He wrote about Beauford after having seen him at the solo exhibition of Beauford's works organized by Darthea Speyer in February 1973.

Beauford and Darthea
Invitation card for 1973 exhibit at Galerie Darthea Speyer
Courtesy of Galerie Darthea Speyer

In Volume 23, No. 3 of the Johnson Publishing Company's Black World (January 1974), Joans speaks with rapture about Beauford's work:

...one has nothing to fear from the paintings of Beauford Delaney but the truth. Some of that truth was exhibited at the Galerie Darthea Speyer, 6 Rue Jacques Callot on the Left Bank (Paris) from Feb. 6 to May 2. The paintings of Mr. Delaney were at last being shown at an important international gallery after years of being almost totally ignored by them, in spite of Mr. Delaney being one of the living legends of American art.

Beauford Delaney's oils are painted natural as he is, giving off charming light that causes on to be happy before the painting. His work stimulates the human soul, like a Billie Holiday recording or a Louis Armstrong trumpet solo, the true magic of America: Black Magic!

The magazine published a photo taken at the exhibition, in which is Beauford sitting in a chair with his left arm outstretched, while Joans and jazz saxaphonist Ornette Coleman stand above him. The caption in the magazine indicates that Coleman purchased one of Beauford's oils, while Joans purchased a drawing.

L to R: Beauford (seated), Ornette Coleman, and Ted Joans
Photographer unknown*

In 1975, photographer Marion Kalter captured Beauford and Ted Joans on film in Beauford's studio on rue Vercingétorix.  

Ted Joans and Beauford Delaney at rue Vercingétorix studio in 1975
© Marion Kalter

In 1976, Joans visited Beauford at Sainte-Anne's Hospital. As a result, he was inspired to write a poem called "In Thursday Sane," which he signed and dated "16 dec 76 Paris Juedi [sic] 2:30 PM." With his permission, it was published by Swan Scythe Press in 2001.

Book cover - Lost and Found: "In Thursday Sane"

Sandra McPherson discovered the poem when found a copy of Amos Tutuola’s novel The Palm-Wine Drinkard in a used bookshop in Sacramento, CA in 1999. Joans had once owned the book, where he wrote "In Thursday Sane" in the back pages. Lost and Found: "In Thursday Sane" publishes not only the 33-line verse, but also images of the original handwritten poem. It also includes an image of a sketch by Joans (reproduced on the book cover), which presumably depicts him and Beauford.

Joans refers to Beauford and Beauford's brother Joseph in the poem - "One of the dark Delaney brothers - Painters both - one here other there".

He mentions the hospital's "Pinel Salle" twice (this pavilion still exists at Sainte-Anne's) and describes Beauford as being a "gray beard man of bright paintings."

He ends the poem by expressing his heart's disbelief that Beauford is "crazy." 

 

*The use of this low-resolution image is contended to be a fair use, since it is used solely for educational purposes in a not-for-profit blog, is necessary for cultural and historical purposes, and is not believed to decrease the material value of the copyright by its use here. The image is of inherently lower quality than the original, reducing the risk of competitiveness and therefore the effects of this copy on the market for or value of versions held by the owner of the copyright. Our usage does not limit the copyright owner's rights to sell the image in any way.

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Beauford Inspires Founding of Interdisciplinary Humanities Club in Dallas, TX

Over the years, the collaboration between Les Amis de Beauford Delaney and the Wells International Foundation has born significant fruit with regard to educational programs for youth.

As a result of visiting the 2016 Resonance of Form and Vibration of Color exhibition in Paris, several Knoxvillians were inspired to implement a program called "Bringing Beauford Delaney Home" in 2017. The Knoxville Museum of Art (KMA), the Knoxville chapter of The Links, Incorporated, and West View Elementary School worked together to create this program for twenty-six (26) elementary school students.

Information card from West View Elementary School Arts Night
Image courtesy of The Links Incorporated, Knoxville Chapter

In 2018-2019, the Classes Duo Paris/Knoxville program brought a total of 42 French and U.S. children together through Beauford's life and art. The high point of the program was the Knoxville students' visit to Paris to meet their Paris counterparts.

Farewell reception collage
© Wells International Foundation

The most recent academic program to develop from the Les Amis/WIF collaboration is the Interdisciplinary Humanities Club (IHUM) at the Episcopal School of Dallas (ESD) in Dallas, TX. Upper School English and French teacher Antonia Moran recruited five additional educators and launched the program at the beginning of the 2021-2022 school year, and twenty sophmore and junior students participated.

Moran shared the following with me regarding the club:

As you may know, this club exists because of YOU and your work on Beauford Delaney and Entree to Black Paris in general! ...

Diving into your work, your illumination of those artists and voices that one does not tend to hear about in connection with Paris, has been a treasure trove of richness that adds to our understanding of what makes Paris great ...

Seeing the students’ engagement has been fulfilling, and I feel like we are learning and enriching our understanding together as we teach each other. It’s been a very collaborative experience and incredible and uplifting to see so many students' eyes opened and interests set aflame.

Zoom conference with IHUM students and faculty advisors
© Wells International Foundation

Read more about IHUM here: Dallas High School Students Love Humanities and Paris.

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Beauford's Art Inspires Creative Writing

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about a creative writing workshop that I'd been asked to lead for the University of Kent Postgraduate Arts Festival entitled Chaos & Order:

Writing from Art: A Creative Workshop.

The event is now a fait accompli!

Eight people gathered on Friday afternoon for an intimate session at the Citè Falguière in the 15th arrondissement. Upon arriving at this dead-end street, I was able to take a photo of the building at Number 5, where Beauford's friend, Charley Boggs, once lived.

5, Citè Falguière
© Entrée to Black Paris

When I approached 11, Cité Falguière - the only remaining artist atelier on the street - I saw that it looks pretty much the same as it did when I photographed it ten years ago.

11, Citè Falguière in 2012
© Discover Paris!

The front room of the ground floor of the building is serving as the exhibition space for the L'AiR Arts Association Chaos & Order show of works by four artists. A table in the center of the room creates a gathering spot for visitors.

Exhibition room at 11, Citè Falguière
© Entrée to Black Paris

The workshop took place in the basement of the building. Pallas-Amenah Morgan, Writing and Literature Liason for this year's festival, opened the session.

Pallas-Amenah Morgan opens the session
© Entrée to Black Paris

I briefly introduced Beauford, then played the four-minute video trailer of So Splendid a Journey - the full-length documentary about him that is currently in production.

Monique Y. Wells and the opening slide of the presentation
© Entrée to Black Paris

I presented the history of Les Amis de Beauford Delaney, the achievements we've made in collaboration with the Wells International Foundation and Entrée to Black Paris to preserve and promote Beauford's legacy, and a brief overview of the evolution of his art throughout his career.

I then showed images of three paintings that inspired two Wells International Foundation interns to write verse and prose poetry, and ended by showing four images that I hoped would inspire attendees to write creative pieces during the time allotted for the workshop.

Artworks for inspiration
© Entrée to Black Paris

Attendees had so many questions about the presentation that only ten minutes remained to complete the creative writing exercise!

Quatoyiah Murry - inspired to write
© Entrée to Black Paris
Words flowing onto paper
© Entrée to Black Paris

In the time remaining for the final segment of the workshop, six of the eight participants shared their reflections on Beauford's artwork and the prose or poetry they wrote as a result. All were impressive and a couple were particularly moving.

Morgan then closed the session and everyone moved upstairs to discuss what had just transpired. Morgan and I were photographed together.

Monique Y. Wells and Pallas-Amenah Morgan
© Entrée to Black Paris

When I left, just about everyone was still in the exhibition room engrossed in conversation. Morgan wrote me later to thank me for "a truly inspiring afternoon," and said that all the participants were genuinely touched by the experience.

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Beauford Delaney Works Described on Video

Today I'm providing links to several brief (less-than-6-minute) videos that present individual paintings created by Beauford over the years. 

Each presenter talks about Beauford's life circumstances, but my intent is to have you focus on their description of the work they have decided to feature.

Portrait of James Baldwin (1945)

Portrait of James Baldwin
(1945) Oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art


The Philadelphia Museum of Art created this video to discuss Beauford's 1945 Portrait of James Baldwin (the speaker was not identified): 

"Portrait of James Baldwin" by Beauford Delaney

Can Fire in the Park (1946)

Can Fire in the Park
(1946) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Stephanie Frey, docent at the Wichita Art Museum, provides commentary on this iconic painting:

Beauford Delaney, Can Fire in the Park, 1946

River Arts Inc. Gallery created a "Tidbits: Pocket-sized Art History" video about Beauford's life and work. In it, gallery manager Kristina Coopman describes Can Fire in the Park from 3:23 minutes to 4:30 minutes:

Tidbits Ep. 6: Beauford Delaney

Untitled (1959)

Untitled
(1959) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Mint Museum Senior Curator of American Art, Jonathan Stuhlman, PhD, discusses this vibrant untitled painting:

“Untitled” by Beauford Delaney

Portrait of Marian Anderson (1965)


Marian Anderson
(1965) Oil on canvas
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
J. Harwood and Louise B. Cochrane Fund for American Art
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

Dr. Shawnya Harris, the Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Curator of African American and African Diasporic Art at the Georgia Museum of Art, and Dr. Steven Zucker, Founder and Executive Director of Smarthistory, talk about this painting:

A modern icon: Beauford Delaney's Marian Anderson

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Another Springtime

Last spring, I published a post containing images of several Beauford Delaney abstracts that evoked the season: Springtime.

I had the same idea for this post, but I'm giving it a different twist.

During the Classes Duo Paris/Knoxville program that united elementary school students from Paris and Beauford's hometown of Knoxville, TN, one of the lessons the students undertook involved copying Beauford's Untitled (Trees).

Untitled (Trees)
(c. 1945) Oil on canvas
29 1/8" x 23 1/8", signed
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

I love this painting - its clean lines and assorted colors remind me of spring. Here are images of several watercolor copies of the work that were created by Classes Duo students in 2018.

Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Julie - Ecole Elémentaire Jean Zay
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Judah - Nature's Way Montessori School
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Doussia - Ecole Elémentaire Jean Zay
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Asha - Nature's Way Montessori School
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Sirine - Ecole Elémentaire Jean Zay
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Lydia - Nature's Way Montessori School
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Chaïness - Ecole Elémentaire Jean Zay
Untitled (Curvy Trees) by Mia - Nature's Way Montessori School
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Writing from Art: A Creative Workshop

Screenshot from Chaos and Order Website
Partial image of Beauford Delaney's Untitled (1947)
Oil on Masonite
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Each year, postgraduate Arts students from the University of Kent Paris School of Arts and Culture host and curate a Masters of the Arts festival, where Kent students and the wider Paris community come together to create, commune, and explore ideas.

Pallas-Amenah Morgan is serving as the Writing and Literature Liaison for this year's festival, the theme of which is "Chaos and Order." She reached out to me to ask if I'd be interested in hosting a writing workshop or panel discussion during the week of the event. To present the theme, she said the following:

We often fear change, but the disruption of truths, ideals, and the status quo have produced some of the most transformative movements in history. We will curate events and workshops that encourage embracing chaos as an opportunity for personal, artistic, and social growth.

Morgan presented several ideas for a workshop, focused on writers she'd heard me talk about during an Entrée to Black Paris walking tour and my presentation entitled "Black Paris and the Myth of a Colorblind France." She said I could present information about my chosen topic and that participating writers would then create, then perform, a short story or a slam poem about the topic.

When I read the theme - Chaos and Order - I knew immediately that I wanted to host a workshop about Beauford's life and art. I told Morgan that Beauford painted to bring order to the mental chaos that increasingly reigned in his mind and eventually overtook his life, and I also mentioned that several Wells International Foundation interns have written prose and poetry inspired by his work. She agreed that this would be an excellent idea. 

I went on to select four Beauford Delaney works – two figurative and two abstract – that workshop participants will be asked to contemplate. They will share the writings inspired by these works at The Creative Workshop: Writing through Art, which will be held on June 10 from 2:30 PM – 4:00 PM.

The festival will be held during the week of June 7-11, 2022. For the full line-up of events, which includes an art exhibition, a keynote presentation, and film screenings in addition to workshops,click HERE.

The Creative Workshop: Writing through Art event will be take place at 11, Cité Falguière in the 15th arrondissement. Cité Falguière is an historic enclave where artists such as Amadeo Modigliani, Constantin Brancusi, and Chaim Soutine once had studios. Beauford's dear friend, Charley Boggs, once lived at Number 5 on this street.

If you're in Paris and would like to attend this workshop, RSVP here.

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Beauford Delaney Abstract Auctioned at Christie's

On May 13, 2022, Christie's New York auctioned a 1967 Beauford Delaney abstract painting during its Post War and Contemporary Art Day Sale.

Lot 167
Untitled
(1967) Oil on canvas
Signed, inscribed, dedicated, and dated (verso)
16 1⁄8 x 10 5⁄8 in. (41 x 27 cm.)
© Estate of Beauford Delaney,
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

The inscription on the back of the painting reads "For Mme Mary Callery with friendship."

Mary Callery is mentioned three times in Amazing Grace: A Biography of Beauford Delaney.  From biographer David Leeming, we learn that she was a sculptor friend of Beauford and that he was posing for her at her home when he made the acquaintance of Georgia O'Keeffe.  This likely occurred during the early 1940s, after Callery's return from a 10-year sojourn in Paris.

Photo of Mary Callery's sculpture of Beauford Delaney
Image by Entrée to Black Paris
Reproduced by permission - Estate of Beauford Delaney,
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator

O'Keeffe wrote about this meeting.  Read her statement here: Beauford: The Georgia O'Keeffe Portraits

Leeming reports that Callery gave Beauford "a suit, a shirt, two pairs of socks, a change of underwear, and a check for $20" in late 1945.  She saw Beauford's work at his first solo exhibition at the Galerie Prisme in Paris in May 1956, and he wrote to her later that year about a work he created during the "return" to portraiture that was an extension of his abstract work.

Beauford gave the untitled painting to Callery in 1967.  It was sold by Christie's in 2009, and the buyer submitted the work for sale in the current auction.

The estimated sale price for this work was $70,000 - $100,000. It sold for $239,400, including a buyer's premium of 26%.

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