The Barnett-Aden Gallery was an art gallery in Washington D.C., founded by James V. Herring and Alonzo J. Aden, who were associated with Howard University's art department and gallery. The Barnett-Aden Gallery is recognized as the first successful Black-owned private art gallery in the United States,[1][2]: 2 [note 1][3]
showcasing numerous collectible artists and becoming an important, racially integrated part of the artistic and social worlds of 1940s and 1950s Washington, D.C.
History
The Barnett-Aden Gallery opened on October 16, 1943, on the first floor of 127 Randolph Place, NW, a Victorian townhouse shared by Aden and Herring, who were business and life partners.[1][2][4][5][6] Herring joined the Howard faculty in 1921, started the university's art department in 1922,[4] chaired the department until his retirement in 1953, and founded the university's gallery of art in 1928 (it opened in 1930).[7][8] Aden, an art history student of Herring's at Howard,[5] was the first curator of the Howard University Art Gallery and the first director of the Barnett-Aden Gallery. The gallery is named after his mother, Naomi Barnett Aden,[2]: 2 [7] who was a "benefactor."[5] From the outset, Alma Thomas, a former student of Herring's at Howard,[5] served as the gallery's vice president and provided funding,[1] as well as Laura Carson and Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Marquez.[4]
Instead of collecting commissions from artists, Aden and Barnett invited gifts of art from the exhibiting artists; these gifts would become part of the Barnett-Aden Collection.[9]
Exhibitions, shows, receptions and other events at the Barnett-Aden Gallery provided a racially integrated gathering place for the art community in a segregated city from the 1940s-1960s.[12][1]
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was photographed visiting the Barnett-Aden Gallery in 1944, as she attended the opening of the Candido Portinari show, along with foreign ambassadors, presidential cabinet members, and local dignitaries.[4][6][7] Romare Bearden said that the first time he saw a Matisse in Washington was at the Barnett-Aden.[13] Therese Schwartz wrote that the Barnett-Aden was the most important art gallery in America south of New York.[13]
Closure and legacy
After the sudden death of gallery co-founder Aden in 1961,[6] the gallery began to decline.[10] Herring, Aden's partner, died in 1969, and the gallery closed.[2][3]
The Barnett-Aden Collection was divided and distributed into three lots: Adolphus Ealey, a former student of Herring's,[6] and a former director of the Barnett-Aden Gallery,[4] received more than 200 paintings;[5][10] Felton J. Earls, MD, received Herring's books, drawings, and prints; and art collector Cecil Marquez and his wife, who were initial supporters of the gallery,[4] received sculptures from the collection.[6][13]
In the 1970s, the Barnett-Aden collection was displayed at the Anacostia Neighborhood Museum of the Smithsonian Institution,[4] the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and the Museum of Afro-American Culture and History in Philadelphia.[6]
In 1989, Ealey sold his portion of the collection to the Florida Endowment Fund for Higher Education.[6] In 1998, Robert L. Johnson, founder of BET, purchased the collection. [6][14]
Alice Acheson, Richmond Barthé, William Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Tony Cornetti, Eldzier Cortor, Allan Rohan Crite, Aaron Douglas, Frederick C. Flemister, Margaret Goss, Lois Mailou Jones, Edward Loper, Frank Neal, James A. Porter, David Ross, James L. Wells, Charles White, Hale Woodruff, Andrea de Zerega.
Jack Berman, richard Dempsey, Aaron Douglas, Robert Jackson, Lois M. Jones, Herman Maril, Jack Perlmutter, John Robinson, Celine Tabary, Laura Wheeler Waring, Ellis Wilson.
Alice Acheson, Tony Cornetti, Nicolai Cikovski, Eldzier Cortor, John Farrar, Robert Jackson, Petion Savain, Anthony Sisti, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Ellis Wilson, and 10 more.
Frank H. Alston, Jr., Paul T. Arlt, Jack I. Berkman, Samuel J. Brown, David Burliuk, Calvin Burnett, Calvin Burnett, Elizabeth Catlett, Nicolai Cikovsky, Minna Citron, Eldzier Cortor, Ralston Crawford, Charles Davis, Thelma W. DeAtley, Edguard Freeman, John Gerard, Malvin Gray Johnson, William H. Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, Herman Maril, I. Rice Pereira, Jack Perlmutter, James A. Porter, John N. Robinson, Laura Wheeler Waring, Ellis Wilson, Hale Woodruff.
Alice Acheson, Phillip Bell, Douglas Brown, Nicolai Cikovsky, Adolf Dehn, George Grosz, Lois Mailou Jones, Eliot O’Hara, Rudolph Von Ripper, Prentice Taylor.
Benjamin Abramowitz, Oded Bourla, Glenn O. Coleman, Charles Davis, Lawrence Lebduska, Peppino Mangravite, Archibald Motley, James A Porter, Laura Wheeler Waring.
Jack Berkman, Eldzier Cortor, Aaron Douglas, James Farrar, Frederick Flemister, Lois Mailou Jones, I. Rice Pereira, James A. Porter, John N. Robinson, Anthony Siste, Henry O. Tanner, Laura Wheeler Waring, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, Hale Woodruff.
“Contemporary Religious Paintings” -- 5th Anniversary exhibition
Romare Bearden, Jean Charlot, Gen-Paul (Eugene Paul), Max Jacob, Hilde B. Kayn, Hildreth Meiere, Kenneth Hayes Miller, Fred Nagler, B. J. O. Nordfeldt, Horace Pippin, Boardman Robinson, Augustus Vincent Tack, Henry O. Tanner, Louis di Valentin, James L. Wells, Robert Winthrop White.
“Contemporary American Art” -- 6th Anniversary exhibition
Romare Bearden, Louis Bouche, David Burliuk, Bernice Cross, Kenneth Evett, Robert Gwathmey, John Edward Heliker, Whitney Hoyt, S. Lev Landau, I. Rice Pereira, Jack Perlmutter, James Penney, Iver Rose, Moses Sawyer, Vernon Smith, Stamos, Tromka, Jakov Volovich, James L. Wells, Ellis Wilson
“Contemporary American Art: For the Home” -- 7th Anniversary Exhibition.
Gifford Beal, Louis Bouche, Edward Bruce, David Burliuk, Eldzier Cortor, Russell Cowles, Kenneth Evett, John Heliker, Robert Gwathmey, Whitney Hoyt, John Koch, Joseph Lasker, James Penny, Sidney Raynes, Andree Ruellan, Iver Rose, Hugh Lee Smith, Vernon Smith, Henry O. Tanner, Esther Williams.
Frank H. Alston, Jr., Elizabeth Catlett, Nicolai Cikovsky, Bernice Cross, Richard Dempsey, Robin Jackson, Lois M. Jones, Herman Maril, I Rice Pereira, Jack Perlmutter, James A. Porter, Candido Portinari, John N. Robinson, Theresa Schwartz, Merton Simpson, Theo Stamos, James L. Wells, Ellis Wilson
“Eighteen Washington Artists” -- 10th Anniversary Exhibition.
Benjamin Abramowitz, Frank H. Alston, Jr., Sarah Baker, Samuel Bookatz, William Calfee, Bernice Cross, Richard Dempsey, Robert Gates, John Gernand, Lois M. Jones, Jacob Kainen, James McLaughlin, Jack Perlmutter, Marjorie Phillips, James a. Porter, Theresa Schwartz, Charles Seebree, James L. Wells
Leon Berkowitz, James A. Broady, Jr., Gene Davis, Richard Dempsey, Peggy Goldstein, Albert Henriques, Harlan Jackson, Robert Jackson, Jacob Kainen, Pietro Lazzari, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, I. Rice Pereira, Jack Perlmutter, James A. Porter, Therese Schwartz, Merton D. Simpson, Stamos, Margaret Stark, Joe Summerford.
“Paintings by New York Artists” -- 11th Anniversary exhibition.
David Burliuk, Slvia Carewe, Minna Citron, Russell Cowles, Kenneth Evett, Walter Feldman, Robert Gwathmey, John Heliker, Joe Lasker, I. Rice Pereira, Andree Ruellen, Karl Schrag, Therese Schwartz, Merton Simpson, Vernon Smith, Theodoros Stamos, Charles White, Ellis Wilson, Yuen Yuey Chin, Maguerite Zorach.
Mimi Dubois Bolton, Gene Davis, Richard Dempsey, Ruth Galoon, Robert Gates, Carmelo Gonzales, Albert Henriques, Pietro Lazzari, Morris Louis, Leonard Maurer, Kenneth Noland, I. Rice Pereira, Easton Pribble, Peter L. Robinson, Jr., Therese M. Schwartz, Merton D. Simpson, Theodoros Stamos, Joe Summerford, Alma W. Thomas, William Walton.
“Contemporary American Artist Group: New York and Washington” -- 13th Anniverary exhibition
Romare Bearden, Yuen Yuey Chinn, Gene Davis, Richard Dempsey, David Driskell, Ruth Galoon, Robert Gates, S. Felrath Hines, Joe Lasker, John Laurent, John Chapman Lewis, Pietro Lazzari, Mary Orwen, I. Rice Pereira, Charles Sebree, Bella Schwartz, Therese M. Schwartz, Merton D. Simpson, Theodoros Stamos, Alma W. Thomas.
“Contemporary American Art” -- 14th Anniversary exhibition
Bernard Arnett, Mimi DuBois Bolton, Laura Douglas, Ruth Galoon, S. Felrath Hines, Joseph Kalfel, John Laurent, Carl Morris, James Penney, I. Rice Pereira, Merton D. Simpson, Hughie Lee Smith, Theodoros Stamos, Earl Stroh, Joe Summerford, Alma Thomas, Laura Wheeler Waring.
“Exhibition of Contemporary Art of Hollin Hills and Washington”
Frank Buffmire, Dorothy Fall, Louis Gross, Jacqueline Hammer, Sonia Hodson, Hilda Shapiro, Frank Spagnola, Alma Thomas, Lorraine Weaver, Dorothy Weintraub.
Richmond Barthé, Selma Burke, Elizabeth Catlett, Harold Cousins, Guy Du Bois, Philip Evergood, Clare Fontanini, Robert Gwathmey, Hans Hoffman, Hughie Lee-Smith, I Rice Periera, Merton Simpson, Theodoros Stamos, Charles White.
^The cited source explains this particular phrasing at footnote 4, on the basis that the Harlem Renaissance sculptor Augusta Savage opened a New York City gallery, The Salon of Contemporary Negro Art, earlier, in June 1939, but it closed after only a few months.
^ abcdMarsh, Rachel. The Power of Art. A mid-century gallery in Washington, DC gave a voice to the oppressed at a time of widespread oppression. Boomer Magazine. June 15, 2017. https://www.boomermagazine.com/special-kind-of-soul/