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Thelma Beatrice Johnson Streat (1912–1959)[1] was an African-American artist, dancer, and educator. She gained prominence in the 1940s for her art, performance and work to foster intercultural understanding and appreciation.
Early life and education
Thelma Johnson was born August 29, 1911, in Yakima,[2] a small agricultural town in Washington State, to artist James Johnson, and his wife Gertrude.[3][4] She was partially of Cherokee heritage.[5] Her family moved to Portland, Oregon when she was a young child.[5] In 1932, she graduated from Washington High School.[1] She began painting at the age of seven[1] and studied art at the Museum Art School (now Pacific Northwest College of Art) in Portland from 1934 to 1935.[6][4] She took additional art courses at the University of Oregon from 1935 to 1936.[6]
Art work
The work of Thelma Johnson Streat is in my opinion one of the most interesting manifestations in this country at the present. It is extremely evolved and sophisticated enough to reconquer the grace and purity of African and American art.
Streat was a multi-talented artist, seeking to express herself through many creative avenues, including oil and watercolor paintings, pen and ink drawings, charcoal sketches, mixed media murals, and textile design.
As Judy Bullington argues in her indispensable article on Streat, "the West Coast allowed highly visible indigenous traditions that generated a different kind of regional flavor from which modernists could draw inspiration. Streat’s ability to blend these multiple influences into a modernist mode enabled her to attract the attention of Hollywood arts collectors, to capture headlines across the United States, and, in the 1940s and 1950s, even to gain some international recognition."[14]
Her work was sometimes controversial. The Los Angeles Times reported that Streat was threatened by the Ku Klux Klan for her painting called "Death of a Negro Sailor", portraying an African-American sailor dying after risking his life abroad to protect the democratic rights he was denied at home.[15] The threat only made Streat believe that a program showing not only the Negro's tribulations but also the Negro's contributions to the nation's wealth was needed, so she initiated a visual education program called "The Negro in History."[citation needed]
Through a series of murals depicting the contributions of people of African descent, panels showed Black Americans in industry, agriculture, medicine, science, meat packing, and transportation. There was even a panel on the contributions of Black women.[7][16]
Streat's work often portrayed important figures in history. Along with images of well-known Americans like Frank Lloyd Wright, she painted a series of portraits of famous people of African ancestry, including concert singer Marian Anderson, singer/actor/activist Paul Robeson, Toussaint Louverture, and Harriet Tubman, and more. As a pioneer in modern African American art, her work influenced and was influenced by Jacob Lawrence, Sargent Johnson, Romare Bearden, William H. Johnson, and the other artistic leaders of her time.[17] Her ability to integrate dance, song and folklore from a variety of cultures into a presentation package and utilize it to educate and inspire an appreciation across ethnic lines was revolutionary for her time.[8]
Collections
Her most well-known painting, Rabbit Man, was purchased by Alfred Barr for MoMA in 1942.[18] Streat was the first African-American woman to have a painting included in MoMA's permanent collection.[19] Streat's work was added to the permanent collection of the Smithsonian when they purchased the mural Medicine and Transportation in 2016, which resides in the National Museum of African American History & Culture in Washington, D.C.[20][21][3] Streat painted Medicine and Transportation between 1942 and 1944, which features the contributions of African-Americans at work in a laboratory and industrial settings.[22]
The Mills College Art Museum in Oakland, California also possesses a children's book illustration by Streat titled Robot.[23]
Albany Institute of the History of Art, Albany, New York
Dancer, singer, and folklorist
Similar to her contemporary and acquaintance Katherine Dunham, Streat traveled to Haiti between 1946 and 1951 to study dance, which she saw as an important inspiration of social change and a catalyst for challenging societal norms.[14] She also visited Mexico and Canada. Streat debuted her new choreography, inspired by her travels, in a performance at the San Francisco Museum of Art in 1946, which combined African, Haitian, Hawaiian, Native American, Portuguese and other indigenous dance forms.[14]
Streat realized that prejudice and bigotry are learned, usually during childhood. In order to combat the development of bigotry, throughout the 1940s and 50s, Streat performed dances, songs, and folk tales from many cultures to thousands of children across Europe, Canada, Mexico, and the United States in an effort to introduce them to the beauty and value of all cultures.
Teacher and activist
In 1945, Streat chaired a committee in Chicago to sponsor murals as part of a "Negro in Labor" education movement.[1] Between 1948 and 1950, Streat moved to Hawaii with her second husband Edgar Kline, and they founded Children's City of Hawaii and New School of Expression in Punaluu, Oahu to introduce children to art and to the value of cultural diversity.[14] A second Children's City school was founded on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia, Canada in 1956.[9]
Honors and accomplishments
Gained national recognition at age 18, when her painting titled "A Priest" won honorable mention at the Harmon Foundation exhibit in New York City (1929).[8]
First African-American woman to have a painting exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York (1942).[28]
Headed the Children's Education Project to introduce American kids to the contributions of African Americans through a series of colorful murals.[16]
Was threatened by the KKK for exhibiting a painting honoring a Black American sailor's sacrifice.[29]
First American woman to have her own television program in Paris (1949).[30]
Worked with Mexican muralist Diego Rivera on his Pan American Unity mural in San Francisco in 1939.[7][8][31]
By 1947, one of only four African American abstract painters to have had solo shows in New York City. The other three were Romare Bearden, Rose Piper, and Norman Lewis.[32]
Personal life and death
She married Romaine Virgil Streat in 1935, and they divorced in 1948.[9] Streat continued to use her married name for professional purposes.[9] Later that year, she married John Edgar Kline, her manager and a playwright and producer of both theatre and film.[1]
Streat died of a heart attack 21 May 1959, Los Angeles, California.[9][33]
^ abAllen, Ginny. "Thelma Johnson Streat (1912-1959)". The Oregon Encyclopedia. Portland State University and the Oregon Historical Society. Retrieved 2017-02-22.
Jones, Aaron (May 1998). "Treasures from Reed's Collection". Reed College Magazine. Reed College, Portland.
"Obituary—Mrs. John Edgar". Oregon Journal. May 14, 1959. p. 11.
"Obituary—Famed Painter-Dancer Dies After Heart Attack". The Oregonian. May 24, 1959.
"Famed Painter-Dancer is Eulogized in Los Angeles". Baltimore Afro-American. June 6, 1959. p. 15
"Couple from Hawaii Show Folklore Paintings, Curios". Bellingham Herald. May 16, 1958.
"Hills Folklore Collected By Husband-Wife Team". Daily Journal. Rapid City, S.D. June 18, 1958.
"Visiting Hawaii Child Welfare Leaders See Folklore as Link for All Children". Sioux City Sentinel. September 18, 1958. A-3.
"The Londoner's Diary: Two Yellow Moons". Evening Standard. UK. March 7, 1950.
"The News That's Going Around". The Irish Press. Ireland. May 6, 1950.
"Art and Artists: Thelma Johnson Streat at S.F. Museum of Art". Oakland Tribune. March 17, 1946.
Artifacts
Letter to Marian Anderson (dated Dec. 19, 1938). Special Collections (Marian Anderson archives), Van Pelt-Dietrich Library, University of Pennsylvania.
Photographs, personal applications and letters of reference. The Harmon Collection (The Harmon Foundation). National Archives.