Charles
Sebree
Charles
Sebree (1914-1985)
was an African-American painter and playwright[1] best known for his
involvement in Chicago's black arts scene of the 1930s and 1940s.
Early life and education
Sebree spent
his early childhood in Kentucky. In 1924, his mother moved to Chicago,
Illinois, which exposed Sebree to a wide range of artistic influences.[2][3] After
attending the Art Institute of Chicago, Sebree remained there and became
involved with a group of artists centered in Chicago's South Side.
Career
Chicago's black
arts movement came to rival the vibrancy seen in Harlem, and Sebree benefited
from connections with artists such as Margaret
Taylor-Burroughs and Eldzier Cortor, as well as the network of support
created through affiliations with such institutions as the South Side Community
Arts Center and the Art Institute.[4]
Sebree was very
interested in the theater, working as a playwright, director, and set designer.
His painted portraits tended primarily to feature performers,
frequently harlequins and saltimbanques.[4][5] These
works show a strong Modernist influence, specifically recalling the expressive
faces and figures seen in the portraits
of Picasso and Modigliani, while also referencing his interest
in Byzantine icons.[5]
Between 1936
and 1938, Sebree worked for the New Deal's Works Progress
Administration (WPA). In 1942, his career was briefly interrupted when he
was drafted into World War II.[6] He was stationed at Camp
Robert Smalls, a segregated section of the Great Lakes Naval Training base,
north of Chicago. While there, he met the playwright Owen Dodson, who
would become a close friend and artistic collaborator. Together, they produced
several plays at Camp Smalls, including the “Ballad of Dorrie Miller,” which
was dedicated to a black naval mess attendant who saved the lives of several of
his shipmates at Pearl Harbor.[6]
After the war,
Sebree moved to New York, where he once again found a community of artists, as
he had in Chicago. His circle in New York included artists such as Billie
Holiday and Billy Strayhorn. He was the recipient of a fellowship
from the Julius Rosenwald Fund in 1945, and went on to co-write the successful
1954 Broadway musical, "Mrs. Patterson," which starred Eartha
Kitt. Sebree moved to Washington, DC in the 1947, where he lived until his
death from cancer in 1985.[3][6]
Works
Plays[7]
·
My Mother Came Crying Most Pitifully (1949)
·
Mrs Patterson (1954)
·
Dry August (1972)
References
1. Wrigley,
Amanda. "Mrs
Patterson (BBC, 1956)". Screen Plays:
Theatre Plays on British Television. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
2. Shine,
Ted (1985). "Charles Sebree, Modernist". Black American Literature
Forum. Contemporary Black Visual Artists Issue. 19 (1):
6–8. doi:10.2307/2904461. JSTOR 2904461.
3. "Charles
Sebree". Essie Green Galleries.
Retrieved 20 February 2016.
4. "Narratives
of African American Art and Identity: The David C. Driskell Collection".
The Art Gallery at the University of Maryland. 1998. Retrieved 20
February2016.
5. "Head of a
Woman, by Charles Sebree". SCAD
Museum of Art. Savannah College of Art and Design. Retrieved 20
February 2016.
6. "Charles
Sebree". Modernism in the New
City: Chicago Artists, 1920-1950. Bernard Friedman. Retrieved 20
February 2016.
7. "Charles
Sebree". The Playwrights
Database. doolee.com. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
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