Boundless 2022: Special Collections X Black Atticus

For this exhibit, early 20th century portraits of Black Americans are framed with sheet music representing popular music written, composed, performed, and/or popularized by Black musicians in the early 20th century. Black musicians have a rich musical landscape in the United States, as people of African descent created new American musical genres, mixing African musical traditions with those of Europe and the Americas during enslavement. By the late 19th century and early 20th century, Black Musicians had already created various forms of African American folk music genres like ragtime, sacred music, blues, and jazz. (1)

This iteration of the Boundless project features Black Atticus, a Knoxville-based artist who has been on the local hip-hop scene for the past decade. Inspired by his Southern roots, Black Atticus has been called “one of the most heartfelt voices of the Southern hip-hop movement. His performances seamlessly weave the art of storytelling with electric rhyme slaying over moody baselines and drum patterns.” (2)

When American mass media exploded in the late 19th century with racist and degrading images of Black Americans, the art of portraiture became a powerful tool for defying prevalent stereotypes, allowing working-class Black Americans to illustrate their humanity and the vitality of Black family life in the decades following emancipation.

To defy attacks on Black manhood, many Black families and individuals either centered portraits of themselves around the men/boys in their families or used props like books to represent images of intelligent, benevolent, and gentle masculinity. Demonstrably, Black women emphasized their respectability and decorum, defying the popular narratives and stereotypes that oversexualized and subordinated Black women.

However, beyond the use of photography as a tool for resistance, portraits of Black Americans from the early 20th century more so demonstrate the ways in which working-class, middle class, and elite Black families and individuals were essentially rendered invisible in mainstream American culture. These portraits reveal the truth behind early 20th century Black families—a desire for security, stability, and the chance to nurture and support both themselves and their children despite perpetual narratives surrounding the Black American identity.

The seven portraits selected for the exhibition illustrate examples of early 20th century Black portraiture in Knoxville and the broader East Tennessee Area. (3)

 

Portraits of Black Americans, circa. early 20th Century

(1) For more information on the history of Black American musical traditions, see: https://music.si.edu/story/musical-crossroads

(2) For more information about the Boundless Project, please visit: https://volumes.lib.utk.edu/boundless/ & https://volumes.lib.utk.edu/news/boundless-black-atticus/.

(3) For more details about early 20th century Black American portraiture see: https://theconversation.com/how-black-americans-used-portraits-and-family-photographs-to-defy-stereotypes-154708

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