Classroom Activity

Activity: Paths from Enslavement

Part of Afro-Atlantic Histories

The spruce-green silhouette of a broad-shouldered man standing among palm fronds looks up at a faint red star against a field of green circles radiating out from the horizon in this abstracted vertical painting. The scene is made with mostly flat areas of color to create silhouettes in shades of slate and indigo blue, lemon-lime and pea green, plum purple, and brick red. To our right of center, the man faces our left in profile. His eye is a slit and he has tight curly hair. The position of his feet, standing on a coffin-shaped, brick-red box, indicate his back is to us. He stands with legs apart and his arms by his sides. Terracotta-orange shackles around his wrists are linked with a black chain. A woman to our left, perhaps kneeling, holds her similarly shackled hands up overhead. A line of shackled people with their heads bowed move away from this pair, toward wavy lines indicating water in the distance. The water is pine green near the shore and lightens, in distinct bands, to asparagus green on the horizon. On our left, two, tall pea-green ships sail close to each other at the horizon, both titled at an angle to our right. Concentric circles radiate out from the horizon next to the ships to span the entire painting, subtly altering the color of the silhouettes it encounters. To our left, a buttercup-yellow beam shines from the red star in the sky across the canvas, overlapping the man’s face. Spruce-blue palm trees grow to our right while plum-purple palm fronds and leaves in smoke gray and blood red frame the painting along the left corners and edge. The artist signed the painting in the lower right, in black, “AARON DOUGLAS.”
Aaron Douglas, Into Bondage, 1936, oil on canvas, Corcoran Collection (Museum Purchase and partial gift from Thurlow Evans Tibbs, Jr., The Evans-Tibbs Collection), 2014.79.17

Grade Level

Observation and Discussion

  1. Have students individually spend some time looking closely at this painting, writing down 10 words or phrases to describe what they see. After they’ve made their lists, have students pair up and compare. What were the similarities and differences in what you noticed?
  2. In pairs, students should work together to generate a list of questions they have about the painting’s artist, subject matter, method, historical context, etc. Discuss the questions generated as a class and select a few for further investigation. Assign small groups to research one of the questions and report back to the class.
  3. Ask students to reflect individually: Have you, or your family, ever left home for a new location or community? What was the process like? How did you and your family adjust to the new community and life?
     

Research

This painting was installed in the Hall of Negro Life at the Texas Centennial Exposition. The Hall of Negro Life opened at the exposition on June 19, 1936, in recognition of Juneteenth—a holiday first celebrated in 1866 by freed communities in Texas, marking the end of slavery.

  1. Direct students to search the LOC-NEH Chronicling America database of American newspapers for mentions of the Juneteenth holiday around the time of the creation of Douglas’s painting. What information can they find, and what does this information tell us about the status of the holiday in the early 20th century?
    2. Ask students to select one or two national or local newspapers for research on recent reporting related to Juneteenth. What is the coverage like, and how far back in time can they find articles covering the topic of Juneteenth?
     

Discuss as a class: What recent events or shifts in attitudes might have contributed to increased coverage on Juneteenth, now a federal holiday?
 

Connections

  • Have students read the text of Langston Hughes’s "Afro-American Fragment" poem (below), and then select someone to read it aloud to the class. What themes or messages does Hughes communicate in his poem? If you could choose one or two lines from the poem to pair with this painting, which would you choose, and why?
    • So long,
      So far away
      Is Africa.
      Not even memories alive
      Save those that history books create,
      Save those that songs
      Beat back into the blood—
      Beat out of blood with words sad-sung
      In strange un-Negro tongue—
      So long,
      So far away
      Is Africa.
      Subdued and time-lost
      Are the drums—and yet
      Through some vast mist of race
      There comes this song
      I do not understand,
      This song of atavistic land,
      Of bitter yearnings lost
      Without a place—
      So long,
      So far away
      Is Africa's
      Dark face.

      © 1951 by the Langston Hughes Estate

  • How does this painting compare to Voyager? Consider the historical context of each painting’s creation, in the early 20th century (Douglas) vs. the late 20th century (Marshall). What feelings does each painting evoke? Which do you find more powerful, and why?
     

Resources

BlackPast: History of Juneteenth
Texas State Historical Association: Juneteenth
 

You may also like

We look slightly down onto a crush of pedestrians, horse-drawn carriages, wagons, and streetcars enclosed by a row of densely spaced buildings and skyscrapers opposite us in this horizontal painting. The street in front of us is alive with action but the overall color palette is subdued with burgundy red, grays, and black, punctuated by bright spots of harvest yellow, shamrock green, apple red, and white. Most of the people wear long dark coats and black hats but a few in particular draw the eye. For instance, in a patch of sunlight in the lower right corner, three women wearing light blue, scarlet-red, or emerald-green dresses stand out from the crowd. The sunlight also highlights a white spot on the ground, probably snow, amid the crowd to our right. Beyond the band of people in the street close to us, more people fill in the space around carriages, wagons, and trolleys, and a large horse-drawn cart piled with large yellow blocks, perhaps hay, at the center of the composition. A little in the distance to our left, a few bare trees stand around a patch of white ground. Beyond that, in the top half of the painting, city buildings are blocked in with rectangles of muted red, gray, and tan. Shorter buildings, about six to ten stories high, cluster in front of the taller buildings that reach off the top edge of the painting. The band of skyscrapers is broken only by a gray patch of sky visible in a gap between the buildings to our right of center, along the top of the canvas. White smoke rises from a few chimneys and billboards and advertisements are painted onto the fronts of some of the buildings. The paint is loosely applied, so many of the people and objects are created with only a few swipes of the brush, which makes many of the details indistinct. The artist signed the work with pine-green paint near the lower left corner: “Geo Bellows.”

Educational Resource:  Exploring Identity through Modern Art

How do artists draw on memories and experiences to create art that reflects their identities? How does an artist’s connection to place spark inspiration? Through guided looking, sketching, and writing activities, students will consider how artists explore identity through their art.

Two women with pale skin look out at us from the other side of a rectangular window opening with a shadowy interior behind them in this vertical painting. On our right, in the lower third of the composition, one young woman leans toward us over her left arm, which rests along the window ledge. She bends her right arm and props her chin on her fist. She looks at us with dark brown eyes under dark brows. She has shiny chestnut-brown hair with a strawberry-red bow on the right side of her head, to our left. She has a straight nose, and her full pink lips curve up in a smile. She wears a gossamer-white dress with a wide neckline trimmed in dark gray, with another red bow on the front of her chest. Her voluminous sleeves are pushed back to her elbows. To our left, a second woman peeks around a partially opened shutter. She is slightly older, and she stands next to the first woman with her body facing us. She tilts her head and also gazes at us with dark eyes under dark brown brows. She has dark brown hair covered by an oyster-white shawl. She holds the shawl up with her right hand to cover the bottom half of her face. Her mouth is hidden but her eyes crinkle as if in a smile. Her left arm bends at the elbow as she grasps the open shutter. She also wears a white shirt pushed back to her elbows, and a rose-pink skirt. The frame of the window runs parallel to the sides and bottom of the canvas. The room behind them is black in shadow.

Educational Resource:  Spanish Art

During this two-building field trip, students explore and compare and contrast the style, subject matter, and technique of artists ranging from El Greco to Picasso.