The fight for racial equality in the nineteenth century played out not
only in marches and political conventions but also in the print and
visual culture created and disseminated throughout the United States by
African Americans. Advances in visual technologies--daguerreotypes,
lithographs, cartes de visite, and steam printing presses--enabled
people to see and participate in social reform movements in new ways.
African American activists seized these opportunities and produced
images that advanced campaigns for black rights. In this book, Aston
Gonzalez charts the changing roles of African American visual artists as
they helped build the world they envisioned.
Understudied artists such as Robert Douglass Jr., Patrick Henry Reason,
James Presley Ball, and Augustus Washington produced images to persuade
viewers of the necessity for racial equality, black political
leadership, and freedom from slavery. Moreover, these activist artists'
networks of transatlantic patronage and travels to Europe, the
Caribbean, and Africa reveal their extensive involvement in the most
pressing concerns for black people in the Atlantic world. Their work
demonstrates how images became central to the ways that people developed
ideas about race, citizenship, and politics during the nineteenth
century.