Pages

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Vincent Livelli Remembers Beauford

I was recently contacted by Peter Stebbins, President of the Lily and Earle M. Pilgrim Art Foundation, who shared information about a connection between Beauford and Barbadian-American artist, Earle Montrose Pilgrim. Stebbins learned of this connection through an online oral history that Vincent Livelli provided for the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. He personally interviewed Livelli and connected me with Annie Basulto, Lead Preservationist of The Vincent Livelli Preservation Project.

Basulto, in turn, asked Livelli several questions on behalf of Les Amis, and recorded Livelli's responses.

Stebbins shared additional information gleaned from Historietas, a published collection of stories about Vincent Livelli's life.

Vincent Livelli passport photo (~1948)
Courtesy of Vincent Livelli Preservation Project

From all of the above, I've created an account of what Livelli remembers about interacting with Beauford in New York and in France.

Vincent Livelli was born to Italian immigrants in Brooklyn in 1920. He moved with his family to Greenwich Village when he was three months old and spent his entire life there. Exposure to lead during his youth caused a severe hearing impairment, yet he went on to master four languages in addition to English as well as develop an appreciation for Afro-Cuban music and become an accomplished dancer. He eventually became a cruise ship director and traveled the world for twenty years.

Livelli met Beauford in the Village in ~1946. He considers Beauford to have been a very close friend. At various points in his writing, he described Beauford as being "like a little Buddha" and "just precious," and said Beauford was "distinguished in comportment" with "a religious quality" and a "proper demeanor." He also described Beauford as "a wise owl who wore his hair like Nat King Cole." In his recorded audio statement, he said Beauford was the "sweetest, noblest gentleman I have ever met."

Livelli visited Beauford at his Greene Street studio many times. He mentioned broken windows, the lack of sufficient heat, and no hot water, and said that Beauford was always bundled up, always wearing a robe of some kind. He described the studio as being lit by candles and said that Beauford once sang "Amazing Grace" to him at the studio to "keep the cold at bay." He compared Beauford to Proust, saying that both men "wore wool scarves and, spoke profoundly and were reclusive but open to conversation."

Portrait of Beauford Delaney
(ca. 1950)
Possibly by Gjon Mili

Beauford inspired Livelli, who recalls sitting on a Washington Square Park bench with Beauford and asking him if he didn't worry because he had no money, a cold apartment, no job... Beauford responded that he only worried when he didn't feel well and Livelli thought that was a wonderful philosophy to live by.

Washington Square, looking north
(1936) Berenice Abbott
Image source: Wikimedia Commons
Image in the public domain

In recalling Beauford's contributions to the Washington Square Outdoor Show, Livelli said that Beauford and two other artists, Earle Pilgrim and Charlie Thomas, sold paintings at the park and in the surrounding neighborhood in 1946 and 1947. He also recalled seeing Beauford's paintings in a gallery on 57th Street.

Livelli provided interesting anecdotes about Beauford and Dante Pavone (Beauford's unrequited love) in Historietas, saying that they both dressed as "monks" because Beauford wore a skullcap and Dante wore a cassock instead of a suit. He described how Beauford and Dante did not walk together in public. Instead, Beauford would wait for Dante, sitting on a bench near Livelli and Anatole Boyard's West 4th Street apartment where they would sometimes rendezvous. He also recalled that Beauford would sometimes wait for Dante beneath the Garibaldi statue near his Greene Street studio.

Dante Pavone as Christ
(1948) Pastel on paper
23 ¼ x 19 ¾ inches
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
Knoxville Museum of Art, purchase with funds provided by the KMA Collectors Circle with additional gifts from Barbara Apking, June and Rob Heller, Donna Kerr, Alexandra Rosen and Donald Cooney, Ted Smith and David Butler, Mimi and Milton Turner, John Cotham, Jan and Pete Crawford, Cathy and Mark Hill, Florence and Russell Johnston, John Z. C. Thomas, Donna and Terry Wertz, Jayne and Myron Ely, Sarah Stowers, Robin and Joe Ben Turner, and Jacqueline Wilson

Garibaldi Statue by Giovanni Turini
Photo by Another Believer
CC-BY-SA 3.0

Livelli mentions that Henry Miller, the Ascoli family, and Anatole Broyard supported Beauford financially during Beauford's New York years.

As a lover of drums and drumming, Livelli was pleased to learn that Beauford enjoyed listening to drum music and played the drum. He said that Beauford liked and collected African drums and recounts that he gave Beauford a nail-studded Japanese drum "to add to his modest collection." He also gave Beauford a drum that he brought back from a trip to India.

Livelli shared a story about meeting Beauford and James Baldwin in Cannes. He said Beauford offered to paint his portrait but that he was unable to accept the offer. He speculated what that painting might be worth today and said it would be cherished over his fireplace.

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Beauford's Palette

Several months ago, I wrote a post about Beauford at the Luxembourg Garden.

I thought of it as I passed the garden the other day, while my husband and I were out for our 1-hour allotment of exercise during the COVID-19 pandemic. The garden's grillwork fence allows for a virtually unobstructed view of the landscape, which is even more stunning in the absence of people.

The flower beds were MAGNIFICENT! The colors were so vibrant and beautifully transposed that I immediately thought of Beauford's palette.

I'm sure he would have appreciated these colors and can easily imagine what he would have done with them on canvas.

Yellow tulips
© Entrée to Black Paris

He would have been beside himself had he seen these gorgeous red tulips.

Red tulips
© Entrée to Black Paris

Red tulips - "zoom lens view"
© Entrée to Black Paris

And though I'm sure he would have admired Le Faune dansant, I think he would have enjoyed the surrounding tulips more!

Le Faune Dansant and tulip bed
© Entrée to Black Paris

Stay safe and stay home!

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Beauford (Not) on View

Three major museums are showing a Beauford Delaney work in temporary exhibitions this spring. Unfortunately, all the exhibitions are closed at present due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

A vibrant work from Beauford's New York years is on display at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Art as part of Awakened in You: The Collection of Dr. Constance E. Clayton. The exhibition showcases works from the museum's March 2019 acquisition of more than seventy artworks by African American artists from the collection of American educator and arts advocate Constance E. Clayton.

Untitled (abstract)
(1945) Oil on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire
Court Appointed Administrator
Image courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery LLC, New York, NY

Awakened in You opened on February 20, 2020 and is scheduled to run through July 12, 2020.

The Phillips Collection has included an untitled Beauford Delaney abstract in Riffs and Relations: African American Artists and the European Modernist Tradition , an exhibition that opened on February 29 and is scheduled to run through May 24. In a Washington Post article dated March 12, 2020, Phillip Kennicott describes this work as "a burst of yellow, orange and red, with subtle blue tones in the interstices of a vibrant field of brush work." (No photo of the work is displayed in the article or on the Phillips Collection Web site.)

Black Refractions: Highlights from The Studio Museum in Harlem is a major traveling exhibition comprised of over one hundred works by nearly eighty artists from the 1920s to the present. One of these works is Beauford's Portrait of a Young Musician.

Portrait of a Young Musician
(1970) Acrylic on canvas
© Estate of Beauford Delaney
by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire,
Court Appointed Administrator
Studio Museum in Harlem; Gift of Ms. Ogust Delaney Stewart, Knoxville, TN 2004.2.27
Photo: Marc Bernier

The Studio Museum in Harlem and the American Federation of Arts have partnered to take this exhibition to six venues across the U.S. Currently it is hung at the Smith College Museum of Art in Northampton, Massachusetts, the only venue in the northeastern quadrant of the U.S. to host the show. It is scheduled to close on April 17 and to open at the Frye Art Museum in Seattle on May 9.

For the latest information on these exhibitions, visit the following Web sites:

Awakened in You: The Collection of Dr. Constance E. Clayton

Riffs and Relations: African American Artists and the European Modernist Tradition

Black Refractions: Highlights from The Studio Museum in Harlem

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Beauford - Exhibitions Online

More and more museums are expanding opportunities to see works and even exhibitions online in the face of COVID-19. Today I want to remind you of one exhibition of Beauford’s work that was originally conceived for online viewing and share news of another that is being shared with the world via Facebook!

Beauford Delaney: A Study in Portraiture is an outstanding online study of Beauford's portraiture created by Maija Brennan, a senior at Smith College.


Maija curated the exhibition during her 2019 summer internship in Paris with the Wells International Foundation. She chose to examine a selection of portraits - including several self-portraits - from Beauford's Boston, New York, and Paris years. She included scholarly commentary for each segment of the exhibition and on each work presented. She also created a timeline of Beauford's life to put the entire presentation into context.

Beauford Delaney: A Study in Portraiture is available for viewing indefinitely. Click HERE to read more about the process behind the creation of the exhibition.

A few weeks ago, I wrote about Through the Unusual Door, the live exhibition that the Knoxville Museum of Art (KMA) mounted to explore the relationship between Beauford and James Baldwin.

Signage at Through the Unusual Door
Image by Les Amis de Beauford Delaney

Fortunately, the opening and a host of additional events honoring Beauford and Baldwin took place during the month of February, before COVID-19 became a pandemic. Hundreds of people came to see the exhibition throughout February and early March. But on March 16th, KMA announced that it would close until further notice. On the following day, it posted the following announcement on its Facebook page:

WE ARE BRINGING OUR NEWEST EXHIBITION TO YOU! Beauford Delaney and James Baldwin: Through the Unusual Door.

While you are at home please follow along with us every morning as we share this amazing story. We hope this brings a little brightness in this unsure time.

And so it begins... The story of Beauford Delaney born in Knoxville, Tennessee on December 30th, 1901 to Delia Johnson Delaney and the Reverend John Samuel Delaney, 815 East Vine Avenue. He was eighth of ten children. @VisitKnoxville #BringingBeaufordHome

Almost every day since then, the museum has published a post about some aspect of Beauford's or Baldwin's life path that includes one or more photographs or images of Beauford's art. All posts are being "liked" and shared.

This is a marvelous way to have the exhibition unfold!

KMA now expects to remained closed to the public until at least July 1. On April 3, I received the following information from Stephen Wicks, Barbara W. and Bernard E. Bernstein Curator at the museum:

"During this dark period we are trying everything we can to stay connected with the public and continue to celebrate the creative collaboration of Beauford Delaney and James Baldwin in this time of social isolation. With that in mind, we are hoping to release the exhibition catalog as a free e-book available on the museum’s website, the publisher UTPress’s website, and any lender’s website that would also like to feature the e-catalog."

Through the Unusual Door catalog cover

The print version of the catalog is superb, so news of the possibility of a free electronic version being released is more than welcome.

I hope you're staying close to home and will take the time to enjoy a virtual visit to both exhibitions. They will bring you joy!