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James VanDerZee Photographer


A superlative studio photographer, James VanDerZee captured the spirit and energy of life in Harlem for more than 50 years.

Like so many pivotal figures of the Harlem Renaissance, VanDerZee originally embarked on a career totally other than the one in which he ultimately excelled.

Arriving in Harlem as an aspiring violinist in 1906, he formed—and performed with—the Harlem Orchestra. VanDerZee was equally skilled at piano, often tickling the ivories with such jazz giants as Fletcher Henderson.

On regular return visits from Harlem to his hometown of Lenox, Massachusetts, VanDerZee found himself shooting pictures of the beloved place as a hobby. In 1915, he landed a job as a darkroom technician. Within just two years, he had opened his own studio on 135th Street. From that base, he began to document all faces and facets of the local community.

VanDerZee’s work exhibited artistic as well as technical mastery. Thanks to his genius for darkroom experimentation—retouching negatives and creating double exposures—the demand for his portraiture soon skyrocketed.

Many of VanDerZee’s photographs celebrate the life of the emergent Black middle class. Using the conventions of studio portrait photography, he composed images that reflected his clients’ dignity, independence, and material comfort, characterizing the time as one of achievement, idealism, and success. VanDerZee’s photographs portray the Harlem of the 1920s and 1930s as a community that managed to be simultaneously talented, spiritual, and prosperous.

A logo banner that says “Drop Me Off in Harlem” in white font on top of a transparent image of the Cotton Club. The Cotton Club image is obscured by a soft mixture of green, yellow, and pink.

I n t e r s e c t i o n s

A black-and-white photo of jazz bandleader, arranger, and pianist Fletcher Henderson. He wears a white suit with a black bowtie and holds the stand to an old school microphone.

VanDerZee often sat in with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra.

A black-and-white photo of activist Marcus Garvey.

Marcus Garvey hired him to shoot pictures for the UNIA.

A black-and-white photo of poet and editor Countee Cullen.

He photographed Countee Cullen.

A black-and-white photo of the exterior to James VanDerZee’s G. G. G. Studio in Harlem, New York.

Hundreds of Harlem residents were caught on film in his GGG Studio.

A black-and-white photo of dancer, singer, and actress Florence Mills.

His portraits of famed Harlemites include a photo of Florence Mills.

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An eight-panel sequence of black-and-white photos of Black adults and children representing Harlem’s elites in refined outfits, such as fur coats, fine suits, gowns, and dresses. The different photo subjects pose on a street next to their automobile, with chairs outside of a building, and inside beside floral decorations.

These photographs celebrate the lifestyle of Harlem’s elite and have become some of VanDerZee’s most famous images.

Video Bio

Video Bio

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