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ArtistPaul Robeson

Artist Years1898-1976

Artist NationalityAmerican

TitlePaul Robeson: Autographed Photograph

Yearca. 1945

MediumPhotography > Silver Gelatin

Dimensions5.4 X 4.4 inches

Description

Silver gelatin vintage photo, signed boldly with pen & ink, printed on heavy, semi-gloss paper, without margins. Fine condition, image lightly silvered. Free shipping to US address.
(bx-r2)

NotesAthlete, actor and singer Paul Robeson (1898-1976) was picked by playwright Eugene O'Neill to star in a revival of his The Emperor Jones in 1924. Robeson later premiered in O'Neill's All God's Chillun Got Wings, but it was his rendition of "Ol' Man River" from Show Boat that brought him the widest acclaim. Robeson began his ties with the Soviet Union in 1934, when filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein invited him to Russia. Robeson was impressed with the country's equal treatment of the races and made a number of trips to the U.S.S.R., including opening 1959 with a Kremlin gala hosted by Nikita Khrushchev. His Soviet sympathies led to his being put under surveillance by the FBI in 1941 and put on the 1947 "black list" of suspected Communists, a charge that was later refuted. His "manifesto-autobiography" Here I Stand (1958) helped restore his passport, and thereafter he planned a world tour. However, ill-health and paranoia of CIA operatives (whom Robeson and his family accused of tampering with his mental stability using a CIA mind "depatterning" program called MKULTRA) pushed Robeson into a suicidal manic depressive state, and after attempts to end his own life, he was hospitalized. Between 1961 and 1963, he received ECT treatment in London, though with no psychotherapeutic care, his conditions only worsened. His family eventually relocated him to a Berlin hospital where he was treated. While he recovered, he lived out the remainder of his life deeply affected by his psychological trauma.
(source: historyforsale.com)

Price $750.00

Additional information

Artist

Robeson

Country

American

Region

North American