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Many Thousand Gone: Songs of My Father solo exhibition For more than two centuries, millions of people around the world have enjoyed Negro Spirituals. These beautiful songs, filled with joy, hopes, pain, and despair, have been interpreted in countless ways. This exhibition is a visual interpretation of these songs. Lawrence Brown was Paul Robeson’s arranger and piano accompanist. He also accompanied my father, Arthur T. Farrell, a bass-baritone. During the 1960s they performed Negro Spirituals and other works from the Robeson repertoire in the New York metropolitan area. Audiences were emotional and enthusiastic. It was not until I heard the CD “Paul Robeson - The Power and the Glory,” that I realized why. Listening to my father and Mr. Brown was like reliving Mr. Robeson's performances. This exhibition honors Arthur Farrell, Lawrence Brown—and Paul Robeson—and the work they did to preserve precious songs in our collective memories. ![]() Mr. Brown and my father often rehearsed in our home on Sunday afternoons. Thus, I grew up hearing these songs, and as I matured, realized there were multiple messages in many of them. Such songs always moved me and I wanted to highlight and share them with a new generation. The title of the exhibition comes from the song “No More Auction Block” where the focus is on the words that affected me most, “Many Thousand Gone.” As a child, I found this song particularly haunting and powerful because it reminded me that many thousands had died to make the life I had and the opportunities before me possible. The message I took from it was that failure was not an option because too many people had worked too hard so I could be anything if only I applied myself and kept the faith. Over the years we have drifted away from these songs, rich with history and simple musical genius, and hardly hear them in our worship ceremonies. My father sang these songs because he and Mr. Brown wanted to keep them alive. By honoring their memory and that of Paul Robeson, I wish to create a body of work that will call attention to them and generate interest on the part of those who are unfamiliar with these songs and the attendant history of the music and the performers. |
Solo Exhibition
January 29 - March 4, 2012 Opening reception: Sunday, January 29, 5:00 pm Metropolitan Memorial UMC 3401 Nebraska Ave NW Washington, DC 20016 "Ms. Johnson has ... developed a series of watercolors illustrating the lives of the five women who are listed in Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus (Matthew 1:1-17). The story of Bathsheba is interpreted by Ms. Johnson using a single scene which illustrates King David’s first glimpse of Bathsheba when she is bathing unobserved, she assumes. Bathsheba’s innocence and vulnerability are illustrated in the painting by the depiction of only the back of her head with her hair floating about her. As a married woman, her hair should be decorously bound; however, Bathsheba assumes she is alone, so she has let her hair, her “crowning glory,” free to spread around her. For one brief moment we, who know the denouement of the story, see her virtue and her helplessness in the freely flowing curls." Marilu Wood Curator, Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist Church Washington, D.C. |
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