On view

Print and Drawings
Howard Mele Gallery

The 1920's...The Migrants Arrive and Cast Their Ballots,

1974, printed 1975

Jacob Lawrence, 1917–2000; born Atlantic City, NJ; died Seattle, WA
Printed at Ives-Sillman Publications
x1976-286

Lawrence depicts a scene related to the Great Migration of the 1910s and 1920s, during which 1.6 million Black Americans fled the racial violence and oppression of the Jim Crow South to seek better prospects in the North. Here, he shows recent arrivals exercising their right to vote, a right denied many in the South through voter suppression. Lawrence’s parents had come separately from Virginia and South Carolina and met in the North, so he was himself a product of the Great Migration, which he called “an epic” and “one of the great points of this drama which we as Americans have experienced.” Lawrence had earlier treated the subject in depth in his famed series The Migration of the Negro (1940–41).

More About This Object

Information

Title
The 1920's...The Migrants Arrive and Cast Their Ballots
Dates

1974, printed 1975

Medium
Color screenprint
Dimensions
plate: 81.2 x 63.2 cm. (31 15/16 x 24 7/8 in.) sheet: 87.3 x 66 cm. (34 3/8 x 26 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Lorillard, a Division of Loews Theatres, Inc.
Object Number
x1976-286
Place Made

North America, United States, Connecticut, New Haven

Inscription
Numbered in graphite, lower left, recto: 9//125 Titled in graphite, lower center: The 1920s...The Migrants Arrive and Cast Their Ballots Signed and dated lower right, recto: Jacob Lawrence – 1974
Reference Numbers
Nesbett L74-3
Culture