The people at Chelsea Space were kind enough to invite me to the pre-opening party for Jazzonia and the Harlem Diaspora on June 30.
I doubt I will have a chance to hop on the plane to London though.
A program that takes its name from a poem by Langston Hugues has to be great.
Here's what's it's all about (in their own words):
Six long-headed jazzers play.
A dancing girl whose eyes are bold
Lifts high a dress of silken gold.
This stanza from Langston Hughes' paean Jazzonia(1923) is a poetic riff on the vitality of New York's Harlem and an ode to African-American cultural history during the ‘Jazz Age'. Harlem, real and imagined, challenged boundaries, racial, sexual and indeed musical. Throughout the inter-war years a diaspora of black artists arrived in Europe, epitomised now by Josephine Baker at the Folies Bergère in Paris. By the late 1930s London was the next gig.
In this show at CHELSEA space the London legacies of singers Adelaide Hall and Elisabeth Welch, who both had been in Paris with ‘La Baker' are re-united with Jazz Tap legends Chuck Green and Honi Coles. George T. Nierenberg's classic film "No Maps on My Taps" (1979) was the catalyst for a renewed wider interest in artists originally from Harlem.
Vestiges of lives and of performances, a syncopation of the highs and lows of the 20th century against a backdrop of the Modernist movement reverberate from a variety of archives and reminiscences. The genesis of this exhibition was in a conversation with David Gothard. In the 1980s Gothard re-introduced these stars, by then in their 80s themselves, to live and film audiences during his artistic directorship at the Riverside Studios, Hammersmith.
Archival footage, photographs, correspondence, posters, programmes and recordings ‘perform' around what is absent and what is present: ‘freedom' and improvisation with the voice and with the feet offer an aural history of African-American Modernism."
Jazzonia and the Harlem Diaspora opens on July 1st and runs until August 8, 2009.
Opening Time
Tuesday – Friday: 11am – 5pm
Saturday: 10am – 4pm
The exhibit is curated by Diana Rodriguez and Judith Waring and unless I am wrong the Event is Free.
Riverwalk Jazz Jazz Notes offered a radio program on the same topic in 2002.
Since I have no illustration yet for the show, I chose the cover of Langston Hugues book 'The Best of Simple' as a stand in.
Related:
Mick Jones (Clash) Aladdin Cave turns into Rock'n Roll Library at Chelsea Space (London)