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IMAGE COPYRIGHT © THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART. IMAGE SOURCE: ART RESOURCE, NY
Do you recognize this biblical scene?
1. Let My People Go
Aaron Douglas
2. Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn
3. Saul Frightened by the Shadow of Samuel
François Gérard
4. Christ at the Mount of Olives
El Greco
5. The Burning Bush
James Lesesne Wells
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IMAGE COPYRIGHT © THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART. IMAGE SOURCE: ART RESOURCE, NY
Answer: (1)
Let My People Go, painted on masonite—a type of hardboard—by the American artist Aaron Douglas (1899–1979), was originally created as one of eight illustrations for James Weldon Johnson’s 1926 book God’s Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse. Douglas subsequently enlarged and revised these illustrations into separate paintings, including Let My People Go.
The painting depicts a submissive Moses, kneeling in response to God’s command to lead his people out of Egypt (Exodus 3). It is filled with symbolism: The rays of light depict God’s command, the three pyramids of Giza (behind Moses) represent the masses of enslaved Israelites, and stylized waves evoke the parting of the Red Sea. Pharaoh’s army, brandishing spears and riding in chariots, can be seen on the left.
Douglas was a leading artist of the Harlem Renaissance—a cultural and artistic movement among the African American community centered in New York’s Harlem district in the 1920s and 30s—and is known as the “father of African American art.” Let My People Go is on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Do you recognize this biblical scene?
1. Let My People GoAaron Douglas
2. Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of JerusalemRembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn
3. Saul Frightened by the Shadow of SamuelFrançois Gérard