African-American Artists on Martha’s Vineyard Martha’s Vineyard, an affluent summer colony located on an island south of Cape Cod, has long attracted African American artists. The town of Oak Bluffs has been a favored vacation destination since its harbor drew freed slaves and laborers in the eighteenth century. In the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, middle-class Blacks bought or rented summer homes there, with their descendants returning annually. Lois Mailou Jones’s oil on canvas, Monday at Menemsha, 1943, brought $25,000 in our June 10, 2014 auction. Jones’s Vineyard Haven Harbor, watercolor, 1924, offers a charming view of the harbor. This watercolor is one of the earliest known examples of the artist’s painting on Martha’s Vineyard. Artwork depicting scenes from Martha’s Vineyard has made many appearances in our African-American Fine Art auctions. The artist Löis Mailou Jones took a particular interest in the island, and it is the subject of many of her works. Jones’s grandmother worked as a housekeeper and nanny on the Vineyard and saved up to purchase land in Edgartown and Oak Bluffs, where Jones began spending her summers in 1906. Her parents also purchased a summer home there in 1909, and the artist spent every summer on the picturesque waterfront. Allan Freelon’s 1925 Untitled oil on canvas landscape, which is most likely a view of the Bass Rocks where the artist summered in Gloucester, Mass. Artwork by Jones depicting scenes of the Vineyard has become her most sought after. In our last auction, The Shape of Things to Come, two of the four works by Jones depicted Menemsha, a small fishing village located in the town of Chilmark on Martha’s Vineyard. Both works went on to sell for more than their pre-sale estimates, and one brought $25,000. Harlem Renaissance artist Aaron Douglas’s etching of a Martha’s Vineyard landscape will make its auction debut in our October 9 sale of African-American Fine Art The October 9, 2014 sale of African-American Fine Art, offered three works depicting Martha’s Vineyard: an oil painting by Jones of Menemsha, and two works depicting Vineyard Haven, one a watercolor by Jones and the other an extremely rare etching and aquatint by Aaron Douglas. Vineyard Haven, also a popular subject for African-American artists who vacationed at the Vineyard, is a community within the town of Tisbury and the main point of entry to Martha’s Vineyard. Another Lois Mailou Jones oil on canvas, Boats, Menemsha, circa 1940s. The October 2014 sale also featured a beautiful 1925 oil painting by Philadelphia artist Allan Freelon of Gloucester, a fishing town north of Cape Cod, which is another popular artists’ colony. Do you have a work by an African-American artist? Learn about how to consign to an auction, and send us a note about your item. Share Facebook Twitter August 4, 2014Author: Swann CommunicationsCategory: African American Art Tags: Aaron Douglas african-american art African-American Fine Art Alaina McEachin Allan Freelon Cape Cod Gloucester Lois Mailou Jones Martha's Vineyard Menemsha Nigel Freeman Oak Bluffs Previous The Richard A. Long Collection of African-American Art Comes to Swann Next WWI&II, Grand Prix and Tennis Images Led Swann’s Top August Posters Auction of All Time Recommended Posts How to Consign to an Auction Auctions 101 December 14, 2018 Records for Charles Alston, Wadsworth Jarrell, Augusta Savage and More in December 2020 Sale of African American Art African American Art December 18, 2020 2017: Year in Review Swann December 28, 2017