Diversity in White House Art: Henry Ossawa Tanner (2024)

Rubenstein Center Scholarship

  • Lina Mann Historian

Henry Ossawa Tanner was one of the most distinguished Black artists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Despite his immense success, Tanner’s life story reveals the challenges faced by many Black artists. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 21, 1859. His mother, Sarah Tanner, was a formerly enslaved woman who escaped to freedom on the Underground Railroad, while his father, Reverend Benjamin Tanner, was a bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Benjamin and Sarah gave their son the middle name “Ossawa” in honor of the abolitionist John Brown.1 Brown brought the fight for abolition to Osawatomie, Kansas in 1855, in the wake of the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act. Confrontations between anti-slavery proponents and pro-slavery supporters led to widespread violence and later all-out guerilla warfare, aptly nicknamed “Bleeding Kansas.” The name “Ossawa” celebrated Brown’s struggles to fight against pro-slavery forces in Osawatomie.2 In 1868, the Tanner family moved to Philadelphia. Tanner enrolled in the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1880 and studied under painter Thomas Eakins. He achieved modest success as an artist in Philadelphia and then established a photography studio in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1889.3

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However, throughout his early career in the United States, Tanner also struggled with discrimination and racial prejudice. In 1891, Tanner left the United States for Paris, France. He stated, “[Racism] has driven me out of the country and while I cannot sing our National Hymn… still deep down in my heart I love it and am sometimes sad that I cannot live where my heart is.”4 In Paris, he began studying with Jean-Joseph Benjamin Constant and Jean-Paul Laurens at the Académie Julian. He experienced a much more liberal and inclusive atmosphere in France than he had in the United States.5

During a brief return to America, Tanner painted and exhibited one of his best-known works, The Banjo Lesson, at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. This piece features an elderly Black man instructing a young boy how to play the banjo. The painting is notable for its departure from the typical caricatures of African Americans of the time period. The painting demonstrates a “tenderness” between the old man and the young boy.6 His success capturing Black subjects took him back to Paris where he exhibited this piece in the Parisian Salon in 1894.7

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Shortly thereafter, Tanner began painting the biblical scenes that made him famous, including Daniel in the Lions’ Den (1895) and Resurrection of Lazarus (1896). These pieces were honored in the Salon de la Société des artistes français and museums began to acquire his paintings, earning him international acclaim. In 1899, he married a white woman named Jessie Macauley Olssen—which further enflamed racial attitudes toward Tanner. That same year, Booker T. Washington visited him in Paris and Tanner painted Washington’s portrait.8

Tanner continued to receive attention for his artwork during the early twentieth century. In 1909, he became an associate member of the National Academy of Design, and a full member in 1927. During World War I, Tanner worked for the American Red Cross and continued to create paintings and drawings depicting the front lines of trench warfare. In these works, he sometimes depicted African-American troops, a rarity in World War I era artwork. He continued to paint during his later years and died in Paris on May 25, 1937.9

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In the Spring of 1994, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton began collaborating with art experts to identify a piece of art by an African-American artist that would be compatible with the White House Collection.10 In 1995, the White House Historical Association acquired a Tanner painting titled Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City from his grandniece Rae Alexander-Minter. It was the first painting by a Black artist acquired for the White House Collection. Tanner painted this piece sometime around 1885, likely to mark the culmination of his studies with Thomas Eakins at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. The painting features a windblown beach surrounded by rising dunes. To emulate the texture of the beach, Tanner mixed sand into his pigments. In the foreground, wind-bent clumps of dune grasses bow to the elements. The ocean is depicted as a silver sliver just below the wide evening sky while the moon rises in the background and sailboats dot the horizon line.

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The painting was unveiled by President and Mrs. Clinton during an East Room ceremony on October 29, 1996. The President delivered remarks honoring Tanner:

And this magnificent artist whom we honor tonight had to live in the afterwash of the Civil War and our continuing struggle to come to grips with our obligations as a people, both moral and constitutional. Now, a long time after that and too long in coming, this great painting will hang in the Green Room and over 1 1/2 million visitors will see it every year. Most of them, but not all of them, will be Americans. Of the Americans, they will come from more than African-American and Caucasian-American stock. They will now come from a myriad of racial and ethnic and religious groups. But when they stop in the Green Room and look at this beautiful work of art, they will know that America here in the people's house is moving again toward its ultimate destiny and living closer to its ideals.

Today, Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City hangs in the Green Room on the State Floor of the White House.

This was originally published on August 12, 2020

Footnotes & Resources

  1. William Kloss, Art in the White House, 192.
  2. This piece of legislation repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 which prohibited slavery north of the 30º36' parallel and instead determined that the slave or free status of federal territories would be decided by popular sovereignty. In response, proslavery and antislavery advocates rushed to the territory of Kansas. In May 1856, Brown and a small force including his sons, raided the cabins of proslavery men and killed five. On August 30, 1856, proslavery forces retaliated. The second conflict, the Battle of Osawatomie, resulted in the death of five of Brown's men, including one of his sons, and the burning of the town. These incidents were part of a larger conflict called Bleeding Kansas (1854-1856) and marked some of the first violent interactions between proslavery and antislavery factions, serving as a prelude to the Civil War; Bleeding Kansas, Encyclopedia Britannica, Accessed January 8, 2020, https://www.britannica.com/event/Bleeding-Kansas-United-States-history; Slavery in the President's Neighborhood, The White House Historical Association, Accessed February 2020, https://www.whitehousehistory....
  3. Henry Ossawa Tanner, National Gallery of Art, Accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.nga.gov/collection...
  4. William Kloss, Art in the White House, 192.
  5. Henry Ossawa Tanner, National Gallery of Art.
  6. Rae Alexander-Minter, "An African American Artist Finds His Voice in Paris During the 19th Century," Présence Africaine, Nouvelle Série, no. 171 (2005): 119-32, Accessed July 30, 2020, www.jstor.org/stable/43617208.
  7. Ibid; Farisa Khalid, Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson, Khan Academy, Accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.khanacademy.org/hu...
  8. Ibid.
  9. Henry Ossawa Tanner, The National Gallery of Art.
  10. White House Announces Acquisition of Henry Ossawa Tanner Painting for Permanent White House Collection, The Clinton White House, Accessed August 4, 2020, https://clintonwhitehouse2.arc...

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