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Overview
(Applause Books). Now in paperback! Decades before the PBS documentaries, before Bill Clinton, Al Hirschfeld went to Harlem. No artist ever captured Harlem's dangerous highs and bluesy lows like this Master of the Performing Curve. Hirschfeld began his artistic Harlem odyssey six decades ago, charting that legendary New York neighborhood's special rhythms and moods in splashy feverish hues. Hirschfeld's Harlem opens onto a special portfolio of these full-color works, a pictorial essay of the Swing Era. Wynton Marsalis, Quincy Jones, Lena Horne and Harry Belafonte, among a dozen other Harlem artists and critics, supply accompanying commentary, reminiscences and analysis each voice focusing on one portrait. Then it's back to Hirschfeld in his signature black and white takes on forty Harlem artists and public figures: Gregory Hines, Duke Ellington, James Earl Jones, Ethel Waters and dozens more all have been caught in the creative act by one of our greatest artists. Each drawing is accompanied by a thumbnail narrative by Hirschfeld about the most famous inhabitants and transients of these fabled streets. Hirschfeld's Harlem opens a picture window into nearly a century of Black American artistry and life.
Synopsis
Originally published as Harlem as Seen by Hirschfeld by Hyperion Press in 1941, this handsome expanded edition features Hirschfeld's lively caricatures, prints, and drawings of Harlem's thriving nightlife and culture, as well as essays by William Saroyan, Zora Neale Thurston, and others. It includes the colorful Harlem Portfolio, a pictorial essay of the Swing Era, as well as a gallery of 40 African- American legends such as Duke Ellington, Harry Belafonte, Lena Horne, Whoopi Goldberg, and many more. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Black Issues Book
Hirschfeld's Harlem is the artist's tribute to the famous neighborhood and the spirit that is Harlem-in all of its bluesy, legendary splendor. . . .The jovial paintings in Hirschfeld's Harlem are accompanied by commentaries and reminiscences by the likes of Lena Horne, Geoffrey Holder, Bobby Short and George C. Wolfe, who express their thoughts about the storied streets, nightclubs, and people that have helped to crown Harlem as one of the world's most historic swinging hot spots.
Editorials
Black Issues Book
Hirschfeld's Harlem is the artist's tribute to the famous neighborhood and the spirit that is Harlem-in all of its bluesy, legendary splendor. . . .The jovial paintings in Hirschfeld's Harlem are accompanied by commentaries and reminiscences by the likes of Lena Horne, Geoffrey Holder, Bobby Short and George C. Wolfe, who express their thoughts about the storied streets, nightclubs, and people that have helped to crown Harlem as one of the world's most historic swinging hot spots.The Baltimore Sun
A beautiful valentine to African-American artists and beyond. . . .Hirschfeld's Harlem is well-worth a visitβFeb. 5, 2004
The New York Observer
Glorious' is not too strong a word for these works of art. . . .A feast for the eyes. . . .Thank you, Mr. Hirschfeld! We hope you know how much we miss you.βDec 22-29, '03
The New York Times
Drawings of Harlem's legendary dances show Hirschfeld's line at its greatest: the Lindy Hop and the Boogie-Woogie carry the book from its Harlem pages to ''Hirschfeld's Gallery of African American Legends,'' a sampling of illustrations from The New York Times. β Shafira Rhodes-PittsThe Oprah Magazine
Smoky, sultry, sinuous: The images in Hirschfeld's Harlem (Glenn Young Books) are as exhilarating as a breath of late-night air. The artist, famed for capturing the essence of stardom with a swoop of his pen, grew up-and lived until his death at 99 in 2003--on the cusp of New York's cultural mecca, home to the Harlem Renaissance and (as Al Hirschfeld says here) "very real people meeting reality head-on and then stubbornly transcending it." Garnished with a reflection on each drawing by a modern admirer, from Eartha Kitt to Quincy Jones, this book, updated from a 1941 edition, was and is just the tonic for a war-weary age.βMarch 2004