Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Artist of the Day, October 18, 2022: Emory Douglas, an American graphic artist (#1676)

 Emory Douglas (1943) is an American graphic artist. He was a member of the Black Panther Party from 1967 until the Party disbanded in the 1980s. As a revolutionary artist and the Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party, Douglas created iconography to represent black-American oppression.

Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and, at age eight, moved to San Francisco. At age 13, he was sentenced to 15 months at the Youth Training School in Ontario, California, where he worked in the juvenile correctional facility's printing shop and learned the basics of commercial printing.

In 1960, Douglas studied graphic design at the City College of San Francisco. He joined the college's Black Students’ Association and worked closely with Amiri Baraka, a voice in the black arts movement, to design theater sets.

Douglas asked to join the Black Panther Party (BPP) in 1967 after meeting co-founders Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale at the Black House, a political/cultural center in San Francisco created by author Eldridge Cleaver, playwright Ed Bullins, and Willie Dale.

When discussing newspaper The Black Panther, formerly known as Black Panther Community News Service, Douglas mentioned to the BPP co-founders that he could help improve the look of the paper.

Douglas became the Revolutionary Artist and Minister of Culture for the BPP in 1967.He redesigned The Black Panther and switched it to web press, which allowed for colored printing and graphics. Here, Douglas developed iconic images that branded the BPP: the depiction of policemen as bloodied or hanged pigs, as protest against police brutality of African Americans, and imagery in line with the Party's 10-Point program. Douglas illustrated BPP's social services and decent housing. In addition, Douglas aligned the BPP with "Third World liberation struggles" and anti-capitalist movements in the edition of January 3, 1970, which shows an impaled pig dressed in an American flag with guns pointed at it, saying things like "Get out of the ghetto" and "Get out of Africa".

In 1970, the BPP shifted their stance to emphasize survival programs as opposed to violence. With that, Douglas's imagery changed as well, showing African Americans receiving free food and clothes. They promoted free breakfast programs, free health clinics, free legal aid, amongst other things. These programs were considered part of their revolutionary tactic. In response, the FBI cracked down on the cause even more, until it inevitably brought it to an end in 1982.

In addition to the paper, Douglas designed postcards, event flyers, and posters that were meant as recruitment tactics as well as a method of spreading the BPP ideology and creating the impression that there was mass support of the cause.

Douglas drew a lot of inspiration from third world struggles and used art as the primary method of propaganda and outreach. His graphics served to promote the Party's ideologies, which were inspired by the rhetoric of revolutionary figures such as Malcolm X and Che Guevara. His images were often very graphic, meant to promote and empower black resistance with the hope of starting a revolution to end institutionalized mistreatment of African Americans.

Douglas worked at the black community-oriented San Francisco Sun Reporter newspaper for over 30 years after The Black Panther newspaper was no longer published. He continued to create activist artwork, and his artwork stayed relevant, according to Greg Morozumi, artistic director of EastSide Arts Alliance in Oakland, California: "Rather than reinforcing the cultural dead end of 'post-modern' nostalgia, the inspiration of his art raises the possibility of rebellion and the creation of new revolutionary culture."

In 2006, artist and curator Sam Durant edited a comprehensive monograph on the work of Douglas, Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas, with contributors including Danny Glover, Kathleen Cleaver, St. Clair Bourne, Colette Gaiter (Professor at the University of Delaware), Greg Morozumi, and Sonia Sanchez.

After the monograph's publication, Douglas had retrospective exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2007–08) and the New Museum in New York. Since the re-introduction of his early work to new audiences, he continues to make new work, exhibit and interact with audiences in formal and informal settings all over the world. His international exhibitions and visits include Urbis, Manchester(2008); Auckland, a collaboration with Richard Bell in Brisbane (2011); Chiapas; and Lisbon (2011).

Douglas is now retired but does freelance design work discussing topics such as Black on Black Crime and the prison industrial complex. His more current works features children. He feels he must continue to educate through his work

© 2022. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Emory Douglas or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

 Emory Douglas
 Panther Mother and Child, 1967
Solidarity with the African American People, 1968
Untitled portrait of the revolutionary poet and playwright
Leroi Jones or Amiri Baraka, 1968
Whenever Death May Surprise Us, 1968
An Attack Against One is an Attack Against All, 1968-70
Clues of Hope, 1969
Only on the Bones of the Oppressors can the People's Freedom be Founded, 1969
The Black Panther Newspaper, vol. 3, Nº 2 (Free Huey) 1969
The Black Panther Newspaper, vol. 3, Nº 13, 1969
The Black Panther Newspaper, vol. 3, Nº 18, 1969
The Black Panther, June, 1969
The Black Panther, March, 1969
 The Black Panther, September, 1969
You Can Jail a Revolutionary, but You Can't Jail a Revolution, 1969-70
African American Solidarity with the Oppressed People of the World, 1970
By all means, 1970
Group of 6 large poster 'Extra's' that were issued
with the Black Panther Newspaper, 1970
Kidnapped, Bobby Seale, Chairman, Black Panther Party, 1970
Political Prisoners of USA Fascism, 1970
S'ils Condamnent Bobby Seale . . . Death to the Fascist Pigs, 1970
The Black Panther Manifesto, 1970
The Black Panther, April, 1970
The Black Panther, May, 1970
The Black Panther, April, 1971
The Black Panther, August, 1971
The Black Panther, May, 1971
promoting free health clinics
The Black Panther, May, 1971
The Black Panther, October, 1971
The Black Panther,  November, 1969
The Black Panther, November, 1969
Untitled, mother and child

 

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