Movement in about 10 Minutes: The Harlem Renaissance
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Summary
In this episode of Art Happens: The Divine Mess of Art History, James William Moore dives into the Harlem Renaissance—one of the most powerful cultural movements in American history. More than a moment, it was a declaration: that modern Black culture belonged at the center of modern American life. From the Great Migration to the creative fire of Harlem’s streets, this episode explores how artists, writers, and musicians transformed visibility into power and redefined what modernity could look and sound like.
James looks at the work of figures like Aaron Douglas, Archibald Motley, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and the musicians who made jazz an engine of change. Along the way, he unpacks the contradictions of the era, including the brilliance of Black artistry flourishing within segregated spaces like the Cotton Club. The result is a portrait of the Harlem Renaissance as bold, complex, electric, and still deeply alive in the culture we inherit today.
If you’ve ever wanted art history with rhythm, tension, and something real at stake, this one’s for you.
J-Squared Atelier, LLCfor the love of art
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