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Films about Queer History

 

Beauford Delaney  (1901 - 1979)

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Amazing Grace : A Life of Beauford Delaney

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Amazing Grace : A Life of Beauford DelaneyAmazing Grace : A Life of Beauford Delaney by David Adams Leeming

On the surface, Amazing Grace seems like an odd title for a biography of a man plagued by social and psychological problems for most of his life before dying in a French insane asylum. Yet in a way, the life of painter Beauford Delaney was strangely blessed. Start with the talent that carried him out of the segregated South of his birth and into the more artistically stimulating milieus of Boston, New York, and Paris; add to that his roster of friends and influences, including such luminaries as James Baldwin, Henry Miller, and Alfred Stieglitz, and it becomes clear that Beauford Delaney was indeed graced with a remarkable life. In Amazing Grace, biographer David Leeming has written a sensitive and perceptive account of his subject's troubled life and memorable paintings.

Leeming's book is the portrait of a singular man, but it is also a chronicle of an extraordinary time in history: the Harlem Renaissance was in full swing, socialism was fashionable, and people were beginning to "get" Picasso. Against this backdrop of artistic and social experimentation, Leeming deftly describes Delaney's conflicting attitudes about race, class, and his own sexuality. Though the artist's ultimate fate was a tragic one, there is much to celebrate about his life, and David Leeming has done an exemplary job of shedding light on Delaney and the times in which he lived.

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Amazing Grace:  A Life of Beauford Delaney

By Adams Leeming

Excerpt:

Beauford Delaney's early life was dominated by the powerful figure of his mother, Delia Johnson Delaney, a strict, proud woman who upheld what she saw as the Christian virtues. She punctuated lessons on forbearance, patience, self-control, and turning the other cheek with songs. In later life Beauford often talked of and sang the songs she taught him: "My Good Lord Done Been Here Blest My Soul and Gone Away" was one, along with the more traditional spirituals and the ever popular "Amazing Grace" that became Beauford's favorite hymn. His mother and he especially liked the verse that reads: "Through many dangers, toils, and snares, I have already come; 'tis grace that brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home." And there were secular lyrics such as "She never told her love, but let concealment feed on her damask cheek . . . smiling, smiling at grief." From the 1930s these and words like them are copied out over and over in Beauford's journals as if they had the power, through connection with his mother's strength, to ward off the inner voices that in the early years only teased him but later gradually took over his mind...

  

Beauford Delaney:  Expressionist Portraitist and Artist

Excerpt:

Beauford Delaney was born in Knoxville, Tennessee in 1901. He and his younger brother, Joseph, born 1904, both started out drawing at an early age. Beauford moved to Boston, Massachusetts when he was a teenager. He studied at the Massachusetts Normal Art School, the South Boston School of Art, and the Copley Society. Beauford lived an unsettling life as an artist and was in constant need of funds to continue his work and studies. Beauford was known for his commanding high spirit and charm. He therefore attracted lots of friends and patrons willing to support his free spirit as an expressive artist. Beauford managed to meet, sketch, or paint a host of celebrities. By 1929, Beauford had moved to Harlem, New York. The Harlem Renaissance was in full bloom. Beauford got to know Countee Cullen, W.E.B. Dubois, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, Henry Miller and James Baldwin, to name a few... 

  

Joseph Delaney

 by Sam Yates, Director, © 1986 Ewing Gallery
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Excerpt:

Joseph Delaney was an all-American artist. He remained steadfast to an honest portrayal of the human condition devoid of political rhetoric and always gently human in his observations. Recognized, but never celebrated, this genuine American artist deserves more clearly an established identity in the history of American art...

 

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