ArtistsMay Howard Jackson
May Howard Jackson

May Howard Jackson

Artist
Sculpture
Representation
None documented
0
Institutional Exhibitions
0
Works in Collection
14
Assets Indexed
6
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
70%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Movements
No movements recorded
Related Artists
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About

Why this artist matters now

May Howard Jackson was an African American sculptor who deliberately confronted America's racial problems through portraiture, creating dignified representations of multiracial individuals during a period when such subjects were rarely treated with formal artistic seriousness. Active in the New Negro Movement and central to Washington, D.C.'s African American intellectual circles between 1910 and 1930, she produced bronze portrait heads and full-length figures that examined identity and belonging. Her work remains significant for its unflinching engagement with themes of race and mixed heritage at a moment when most sculptors avoided these subjects entirely.

Source: Smithsonian Institution · Trust score: 95% · Updated 8d ago

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Movement
Medium
Sculpture
Related Artists
6 in graph
Institutional

Museum Collections

Record

Images

13 assets
May Howard Jackson working on a bust of Dr. Du Bois
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May Howard Jackson
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May Howard Jackson, Bust of Kelly Miller
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May Howard Jackson, Head of a Negro Child, Exhibit of Fine Arts by American Negro Artists, 1929
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May Howard Jackson, 1919, The Brotherhood, Cover Image for The Crisis, Easter 1919
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May Howard Jackson, 1916, Portait of a Mother and Child
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May Howard Jackson working on a bust of Dr. Du Bois, 1912, La Follettes Magazine
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May Howard Jackson, 1906, Portait of Paul Laurence Dunbar
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Record

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Institutional

Representation & Collections

In collection
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Record

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