The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of March 19, 2024

Coming Home

Coming Home

1931–1946
(American, 1900–1980)
Sheet: 48.5 x 37.9 cm (19 1/8 x 14 15/16 in.); Image: 25.2 x 20.2 cm (9 15/16 x 7 15/16 in.)
© VAGA, New York, NY
Location: not on view

Description

This scene of a working-class woman returning to a ramshackle house after a long day's work dramatically expresses the abysmal poverty and bigotry faced by African American Southerners. Their plight led to the migration of nearly 250,000 black farmworkers to northern urban industrial centers by 1918. In the 1930s and '40s, their descendants, exploring their past, rediscovered the South as a place of beauty, strength, vitality, violence, and tradition. Woodruff, who was raised in Tennessee but had moved to Indiana and studied in Paris, went back to the South in 1931 to teach at Atlanta University, where he remained until 1945.
  • The Cleveland Museum of Art (1/26/2014 - 5/18/2014); "Our Stories: African American Prints and Drawings"
  • {{cite web|title=Coming Home|url=false|author=Hale Aspacio Woodruff|year=1931–1946|access-date=19 March 2024|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1998.11.2