
Harvest Talk
1953
Charles White is recognized for the richness of his graphic work and his paintings, which typically depict aspects of the history, culture, and life of African Americans. A native of Chicago, White attended the School of the Art Institute, the Art Students League of New York, and later the Taller de Gráfica Popular in Mexico. Beginning in 1939, he was employed by the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration. White’s father was a railroad and steel worker and his mother was a domestic worker; this inspired in White a deep respect for labor. Harvest Talk, one of six charcoal and carbon pencil drawings originally exhibited at ACA Galleries in New York in 1953, exemplifies the artist’s mature drawing style. Here his strong, assured manner, coupled with the heroic proportions of the figures and the emphasis on the large scythe (an emblem often associated with the Soviet Union)—as well as the social realist sensibilities that prevail throughout his oeuvre, his travels to the Soviet Union, and his writings for and affiliation with left-wing publications such as Masses and Mainstream, Freedomways, and the Daily Worker—suggest that Harvest Talk was inspired by socialist ideals. Like many of White’s works on paper, it conveys the power of a mural despite its relatively small format.
- Medium
- Charcoal, Wolff's carbon drawing pencil, and graphite, with stumping and erasing, on ivory wood pulp laminate board
- Dimensions
- Location
- Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
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Artists in conversation

Käthe Kollwitz
German · b. 1867

Kollwitz mastered charcoal and graphite drawing to depict working class laborers and social struggle with profound emotional weight, closely paralleling White's monumental figurative approach and his dedication to portraying the dignity of ordinary people under hardship.

Elizabeth Catlett
American/Mexican · b. 1915

Catlett shared White's commitment to depicting African American life and labor with powerful figurative imagery, and like White she trained at the Taller de Gráfica Popular in Mexico, resulting in a similarly bold and humanistic graphic style centered on Black working class subjects.
John Wilson
American · b. 1922
Wilson worked extensively in charcoal and graphite to create monumental figurative drawings celebrating African American identity and the struggles of working people, sharing White's Post War modernist sensibility and his deeply expressive yet precise draftsmanship.

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