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Ernestine
and Malcolm Brown
Pioneering
Gallery Owners and Art Educators
A
survey taken by the American Art Dealers Association in the early
1980s revealed that 75 percent of contemporary art galleries failed
within the first five years. But those odds did not dissuade Malcolm
and Ernestine Brown from opening the Malcolm Brown Gallery in 1980
in the Cleveland suburb of Shaker Heights. Nor were they daunted
by the fact that few galleries in the country specialized in showing
the work of African-American artists. Brown, himself an aspiring
young watercolorist from Charlottesville, Virginia, had learned
first hand about the neglect of black artists by mainstream commercial
galleries. And he and his wife Ernestine, a former business teacher
from Youngstown, who had met when she was a graduate student at
Boston University, were determined to change that picture.

Malcolm
and Ernestine Brown with Romare Bearden (center) in the 1980s
Over
the next 25 years, the Malcolm Brown Gallery showcased African-American
artists from Cleveland, past and present, with Malcolm Brown (who
had earned his master's degree in art history from Case Western
Reserve University in 1969), taking his turn beside other nationally
prominent black artists whose work had not been seen before in the
region. These solo and group exhibitions, often supplemented by
gallery talks and book signings, arguably did more than any other
institution to give area art lovers the opportunity to view, appreciate
and collect top-quality fine art by African Americans. Among those
who came to look and learn: two generations of students shepherded
by Brown himself, who taught art for 32 years in the Shaker Heights
schools (1969-2000) and evening classes for 12 years at the Cleveland
Institute of Art (1970-1982), while showing-and selling-his own
work here and around the U.S.
The
gallery also did much to restore some lost pages in the history
of American art. A 1993 exhibition featured 15 stone and bronze
sculptures, including a bust of Duke Ellington, by the 93-year-old
Selma Burke. Burke, who first won attention in the 1930s in that
explosion of art, literature and music known as the Harlem Renaissance,
had later married poet Claude McKay, gallery-goers learned, and
traveled to Europe to study with Henri Matisse and Aristide Maillol.
She is best known for her bronze portrait plaque of President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, created from life in 1944, while she was working as
a truck driver in a New York navy yard. This is the portrait featured
on the Roosevelt dime.
In
1994 the Malcolm Brown Gallery displayed the playful jazz-inspired
work of Moe Brooker, a painter (and Cleveland Arts Prize winner)
who had taught at the Cleveland Institute of Art from 1976 to 1985.
The next year brought the second of three exhibitions of dazzling
quilts by the Cincinnati artist Carolyn Mazloomi, whose work had
been shown at the Corcoran Gallery and the Smithsonian's Renwick
Gallery in Washington, D.C., but until the Brown Gallery shows had
never been seen in Cleveland. And 1997 brought together 25 drawings,
prints and collages spanning three decades by the legendary Romare
Bearden (1912-1988). Departing once again from the usual practice
of commercial galleries, which tend to display only work that is
for sale, gallery director Ernestine Brown cajoled private collectors
to lend some of their favorite pieces for the occasion. The result,
wrote Plain Dealer critic Steve Litt, was scrumptious.
Other
prominent African-American artists exhibited by the Malcolm Brown
Gallery have included Elizabeth Catlett, Lamar Briggs, Ed Dwight
and Hughie Lee-Smith, the most famous black American artist ever
to come out of Cleveland. Though the Harlem Renaissance was in full
swing when he was coming of age on East 105th Street, Lee-Smith
had had no local role models. He honed his craft under the watchful
eyes of Carl Gaertner, Rolf Stoll and Henry Keller at the Cleveland
School of Art (now the Cleveland Institute of Art), becoming only
the second African-American to graduate from CSA and the second
elected to membership in the National Academy of Design in New York.
Hughie
Lee-Smith (who had been given solo shows in 1984 and 1996) was included,
along with Oberlin-born Charles Salee (the first black graduate
of CSA) and Cleveland muralist Elmer Brown (whose 1942 Mural
for Freedom still graces the auditorium of the City Club of
Cleveland) in an ambitious exhibition mounted by the Malcolm Brown
Gallery in February 2001.The show consisted of 30 pieces by 14 African-American
artists whose careers had been fostered by the Works Progress Administration
during the Depression. Here, side-by-side for perhaps the first
time, was work by the great Jacob Lawrence, Horace Pippin, Ernest
Alexander, Fred Jones, Margaret T. Burroughs, William Carter, Frank
Neal, E.C. Nixon, James Porter, Charles Sebree, Brown, Sallee and
Charles White. The gallery commissioned Alfred Bright of Youngstown
State University to write a catalogue.
The
Browns have also shown work by famed African batik artist Nike Olaniyi,
Cuban painter Ramon Carulla and important non-African American artists
(a 1983 tapestry show included designs by Philip Pearlstein, Roy
Lichtenstein and Robert Motherwell). But their primary commitment
has always been to what the Cleveland Arts Prize committee called
their shared dream: to bring the rich heritage of African-American
art and African-inspired design into people's lives and homes-in
all its stunning variety. For Africa, as author Sharne Algotsson
(The Spirit of African Design) told a standing-room crowd
at the Malcolm Brown Gallery in 1999, is not just one country,
but a land of many countries and languages. Thanks to
Malcolm and Ernestine Brown, northeast Ohioans now have a sense
of that richness.
text
by
Dennis
J. Dooley
1986
Winner of
the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Spring
2004
For
more information, click on
http://www.malcolmbrowngallery.com
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