Discovering the cool at the intersection of art and music
April is Jazz Appreciation Month and the American History Museum is hosting a variety of events and programs the past and stimulate the future of the uniquely American style of music. Each year, the Smithsonian issues a poster to celebrate JAM and honor a jazz master. This year, the JAM poster features composer-pianist Billy Strayhorn, whose legacy is well-represented in the museum’s vast Duke Ellington Collection. The poster was designed by the Brooklyn-based artist and jazz aficionado Keith Henry Brown. He also created the drawing for the 2011 JAM poster, featuring pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams. Brown shared his thoughts on what jazz has meant to him and the experience of creating posters for Jazz Appreciation Month.
It began for me at the drop of a needle and the first strain of “All Blues,” a track on Miles Davis’ seminal record Kind of Blue. I was a music geek for most of my young life, but never much delved into jazz, which seemed opaque and impossible to decipher. But there was something about the languid bass line and Miles’ fluid trumpet on “All Blues” that drew me in. It was the image of jazz.
Kind of Blue features five supremely gifted musicians in addition to Davis—tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Bill Evans (Wynton Kelly substitutes on one track), alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb—meshing their collective experience into something that was extraordinary and singular. In my mind’s eye I could see them: a half-lit studio, cigarette smoke billowing. I clung to this seductive world, and so began a lifelong love of this music.
Always drawing since childhood, I found jazz imagery becoming just as prominent as the superheroes that had dominated my numerous earlier sketchbooks.
In 2011, I received a call from the National Museum of American History. Would I consider allowing them to purchase the rights to a painting I had posted online of the great jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams? I told them I would be honored. I was ecstatic, but secretly, I wasn’t happy with that particular piece. I explained that I had another painting of Williams that I wanted them to see. That weekend I quickly drew what I thought was a better rendering and sent it in the following Monday. To my joy, it was accepted and became the 2011 JAM Poster.
I never forgot that happy experience. In 2014, I inquired about the opportunity to submit a second image for Jazz Appreciation Month. I was informed that this year’s subject would be the brilliant jazz composer Billy Strayhorn. As before, I was asked if I had an existing piece of Mr. Strayhorn. I mentioned that I did, yet I decided to create a new picture. After doing a bit of research and reading David Hadju’s book, Lush Life, I painted Mr. Strayhorn’s portrait. To my happiness, my image was again chosen.
The opportunities to create work for the JAM posters are among the highlights of my career. Beginning with the first few notes I heard on Kind of Blue, I can think of no more pleasurable a progression than to share my enthusiasm for jazz with young people all over the world. My hope is that they, too, discover and embrace this wonderful music.
Julia Falkowski and Meg Salocks contributed to this blog post which was originally published by the blog, O Say Can You See? There are a limited number of JAM posters featuring the Strayhorn portrait available. To request one, complete this online form. Be the first to know about jazz programs and activities by signing up for the newsletter.
Posted: 3 April 2015