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Beauford Delaney Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS-3967

  • Staff Only

The Beauford Delaney Papers consist of the American artists’ personal and professional papers from the 1900s through the 1970s (mostly 1930s-1970s). This includes correspondence with colleagues, friends and family; photographs of Beauford and others; sketchbooks and notebooks; loose sketches and other artworks; exhibition materials; and printed material collected by Delaney. The bulk of the collection consists of materials collected and created during Beauford’s time in Paris, where he lived from 1953 until his death in 1979. There are also significant materials from his years in New York (1929-1953), and -- to a much lesser extent -- Boston (1923-1929), where he moved from Knoxville, Tennessee at the age of 21.

The collection is grouped into seven series based on the format and content of the material. In order, these series are: Biographical Records (1952-1981), Correspondence (1931-1991), Photographic Material (1909-1979, undated), Artwork (undated), Journals and Sketchbooks (1929-1979), Printed Materials (1930-1978) and Artifacts (undated).

Most materials are described at an individual item level. One large exception is the Printed Material series, which is described at the folder level. The language of the materials is noted in details about separate series. Most documents are written in English and French.

I. Biographical Material (1952-1981) Delaney’s biographical material is arranged into three subseries: Financial Documents (1953-1974), Medical Documents (1962-1981, undated), and Personal Documents (1952-1975, undated). Financial documents include bank statements, contracts, checks, money orders, utility bills, and receipts. Medical Documents include health records and doctor’s notes. Personal Documents include travel documents, residential applications, and receipts. All materials in the series are described at an item level.

II. Correspondence (1931-1991, undated) This series consists of family, personal, and business correspondence, contact information, and notes. It is arranged into five subseries: Family Correspondence (1931-1979, undated); Identified Correspondence (Non-Family) (1941-1991, undated); Partially Identified Correspondence (1954-1970, undated); Unidentified Correspondence (1953-1975, undated); and Contact Cards and Notes (undated).

The Family Correspondence subseries (1931-1991) contains three sub-subseries: Family Correspondence with Beauford Delaney (1954-1973); Family Correspondence with Joseph Delaney (1931-1979); and Correspondence Between Other Family Members(1964). The first subseries contains letters and notes between Beauford, his mother Delia; his brothers, Samuel Emery Delaney (referred as Emery) and Joseph; or Emery’s children, Lois Imogene (referred to as Imogene), Ogust Mae, and Samuel Emery, Jr. (referred to as Emery or Junior) and his wife Gertrude. The correspondence is arranged by sender, with letters from Beauford to the correspondent coming before letters to Beauford from the same correspondent. The second subseries contains correspondence between Joseph and these same family members. The last sub-subseries contains a letter from Beauford's grandnephew Michael “Mike” Delaney (son of Ogust) to the family. The items are described at the item level, including an abstract of the subject matter discussed.

The Identified Correspondence (Non-Family) subseries (1941-1978, 1991) contains letters, postcards and other documents sent between Beauford Delaney and friends and acquaintances, including significant figures in Delaney’s personal and professional life. Frequent correspondents include James Baldwin, Ahmed Bioud, Charles Boggs, Larry Calcagno, Michael Freilich, Miriam and Palmer Hayden, Al Hirschfeld, Richard Long, Henry Miller, and Darthea Speyer. The series is arranged in alphabetical order by correspondent and then by date. Letters from Beauford are included adjacent to that correspondents’ letters to Beauford. Also included in this subseries are a few letters to Joseph Delaney from other correspondents, which accounts for the most recent letter in the collection (a letter to Joseph from Charles Farr in 1991).

Partially Identified Correspondence consists of letters and other written communications (mostly to Beauford Delaney), where the name of the sender is only partially known or identified. Unidentified Correspondence consists of letters where the name of the sender is completely unknown. It is described only at the folder level and is arranged by date.

The last Correspondence subseries, Contact Cards and Notes, is described at the folder level and contains printed contact cards and assorted papers with handwritten names and addresses, as well as notes by Beauford (and sometimes others). The notes range from scribbles, lists, and lyrics to paragraphs of the artist’s written observations. The content is very similar to the writing found in the notebooks and sketchbooks in the fifth series described below. In the Contact Cards and Notes subseries of Correspondence, the notes may be on any kind of paper, including envelopes, newspaper, and advertising and packaging materials (such as flattened cigarette packs). Thie subseries in Correspondence is arranged and described by format only, and not at the item level. Most of the materials are in English. Some of the materials are in French, as noted.

III. Photographic Material (1909-1979 and undated) Photographic Material includes photographs of Beauford Delaney and his friends and family; assorted candid photographs; and photographs of Delaney’s exhibitions, art shows, and sales. Some family and individuals in photographs are identified by name, such as Henry Miller, Charles Boggs, and James Baldwin. Subjects of other photographs remain unidentified. The photographs are arranged into ten subseries: 1900s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, Identification Photos (1910-1979), Artwork (1919-1979), and Oversize Photographic Material (1919-1979). The contents of all subseries are described at an item level. The first seven subseries are by decade (1900s through 1970s) and are further arranged by mostly inferred dates. Identification Photos consists of photographs of Delaney (and in one instance, Richard Long) meant for passports or other official forms of identification. Artwork (undated) includes photographs of paintings, sketches, and sculptures. Near-duplicates of photographs have also been itemized. Much of the artwork photographed is by other artists. Oversize Photographic Materials includes larger photographic portraits and images of biographical records and artwork.

IV. Artwork (mostly undated) This fourth series consists of nearly 300 individual pieces of art, such as sketches, landscapes, abstractions, portraits, and figure drawings in a variety of mediums, including graphite, ink, oil pastel, and watercolor. They are usually studies as opposed to realized works. While they are mostly created (or assumed to be created) by Beauford Delaney, there are also a few created by Charles Boggs, Henry Miller, Don Freeman, and others, as noted). Sizes of work range from 2.25 x 3.5 inches to 19.5 x 22 inches. Most of the artwork is undated. While the artworks within this series are not arranged in any particular order, they are numbered and described at an item level.

V. Journals and Sketchbooks (1929-1979) This fifth series contains 64 of Beauford Delaney’s journals and sketchbooks. These books were used for both sketches and handwritten text, and journals and sketchbooks mostly describe contents within each of the books. The sketches include landscapes, abstractions, portraits, and figure drawings in graphite, ink, oil pastel, and watercolor. Some of the sketches could be identified as preliminary versions of Delaney’s known paintings. The notes here include diary entries, daily musings, song lyrics and mediations, contact information or event times and locations. There is no known order within the pages: where text and sketches appear may be due only to time and convenience. Many pages are blank. The materials are described at the book level, with a note about the contents of each. For preservation purposes, the physical collection is arranged by size of book.

The Printed Materials series is primarily composed of published or widely disseminated material collected by Beauford Delaney, often in the normal course of living. The materials are arranged by format into five subseries: Exhibition Records (1930-1978) which documents exhibits and other aspects of Delaney’s career, as well as those of friends and associates; Press Clippings (1930-1972, undated): stand-alone articles arranged by subject; Ephemera (1948-1975, undated), includes magazine pages and other material pertaining to daily life, large and small events, travel, and art; Publications (1954-1979), which includes periodicals and books; and Oversized, which contains some larger press clippings, gallery and other larger-format materials.

Dates

  • 1909-1991
  • Majority of material found in 1910-1979

Conditions Governing Access

Researchers interested in consulting any of the collections are advised to contact Special Collections. See www.lib.utk.edu/special for detailed information. Collections must be requested through a registered Special Collections research account.

Conditions Governing Use

Estate of Beauford Delaney, by permission of Derek L. Spratley, Esquire, Court Appointed Administrator. Held in the Beauford Delaney Papers, MS.3967, Betsey B. Creekmore Special Collections and University Archives, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Extent

35 Linear Feet (35 boxes)

Overview

The Beauford Delaney Papers (1909-1991) consists of family, personal, and professional papers and some artifacts created or collected by the Knoxville-born artist Beauford Delaney (1901-1979), now regarded as one of the major modernist painters of his time. The papers are grouped into seven series based on the format and content of the material. In order, these series are: Biographical Records (1952-1981, undated), Correspondence (1931-1991), Photographic Material (1909-1979), Artwork (undated), Journals and Sketchbooks(1929-1979), Printed Materials (1930-1978), and Artifacts (undated). The collection also contains some correspondence and other works created or collected by Joseph Delaney (1904-1991), Beauford's younger brother, who was also a world-renowned painter.

Biographical / Historical

Beauford Delaney was born in Knoxville, Tennessee in 1901. His father (John) Samuel Delaney was a circuit-riding Methodist preacher, and his mother, Delia Elizabeth (Johnson) Delaney, was born into slavery. Only four of their ten children survived to adulthood. His early artistic training was supported by prominent members of Knoxville’s Black and artistic communities. In 1923, Delaney left Knoxville to pursue further studies in Boston, and by 1929 moved on to New York City. A year later (1930) he had his first solo show, at the New York Public Library’s 135th branch. In the same year his work was included in a group exhibit at what is now the Whitney Museum of Art. Over the next two decades Delaney became a highly regarded figure in the Harlem Renaissance, his colorful paintings reflecting a New York of jazz musicians, street and interior scenes, and portraits, including those of friends and acquaintances such as Georgia O’Keefe, James Baldwin and Henry Miller.

Beauford Delaney moved to Paris in 1953, where he continued to develop his personal and professional network. His work, increasingly in the vein of abstract expressionism, was shown in solo and group exhibitions at many Paris galleries (including those of Paul Facchetti, Yvon Lambert and Darthea Speyer) and other countries. Delaney counted many renowned cultural figures among his friends and devotees, including James Baldwin and Henry Miller, James Jones, Palmer Hayden, Lawrence Calcagno, James LeGros, Dorothy Block, and Darthea Speyer. While Delaney's correspondence shows he was held in high regard in elite but relatively small cultural circles, he was not well known. This obscurity is often attributed to the fact that he was a Black man in overlapping cultures where people of his race were roudly discouraged from participating. He was also gay in a time where this often had to remain hidden knowledge. Delaney also suffered from chronic mental illness. His health declined during the last two decades of his life, and he died in Paris in 1979. Beauford Delaney is now considered by a growing number of scholars and critics to be one of the major modernist painters of the 20th century.

Joseph Delaney (1904-1991) was Beauford Delaney's younger brother. He was an equally well-known painter whose life, personality, and art differed significantly from Beauford's. Joseph Delaney joined his brother Beauford in New York City in 1930, enrolling in the Art Students League and working for the New Deal’s Works Progress Administration (WPA) during the Great Depression. Delaney remained in New York for most of his life. There, he developed his distinct artistic style of crowded canvases with bodies, crowds, and city scenes full of movement and expression. His work can be found in the Knoxville Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and others. He was instrumental in preserving his brother Beauford's art and papers.

Arrangement

I. Biographical Information (1952-1981, undated)

‎‎ ‎ A. Financial Documents (1953-1974)

‎‎ ‎ ‎ B. Medical Documents (1962-1981, undated)

‎ ‎‎ ‎ C. Personal Documents (1926-1975, undated)

II. Correspondence (1931-1991, undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ A. Correspondence to and from the Delaney Family (1931-1979, undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ B. Identified Correspondence (1941-1991, undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ C. Partially Identified Correspondence (1954-1970, undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ D. Unidentified Correspondence (1953-1975, undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ E. Contact Cards and Notes (circa 1920-1970)

III. Photographic Material (1909-1979)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ A. Photographs (circa 1900s)

‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ B. 1920s (circa 1920-1929)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ C. 1930s (circa 1930-1939)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ D. 1940s (circa 1940-1949)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ E. 1950s (circa 1950-1959)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ F. 1960s (circa 1960-1969)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ G. 1970s (circa 1970-1979)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ H. Identification Photos (undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ I. Photographs of Artwork (undated)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ J. Oversize Photographic Material (circa 1960s)

IV. Artwork (circa 1929-1979)

V. Journals and Sketchbooks (circa 1929-1979)

VI. Printed Materials, 1930-1978 A. Exhibition Records (1930-1978)

‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ B. Press Clippings (1930-1972)

C. Ephemera (1948-1975) D. Publications (1954-1979) E. Oversized Printed Materials (1959-1966) VII. Artifacts

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Most of the materials were removed from Beauford Delaney’s last apartment by his brother Joseph Delaney (1904-1991) after Beauford's death in 1979. Additional materials, including some family correspondence, were presumably added later by Joseph Delaney. The papers were held at the Knoxville Museum of Art until the University of Tennessee Libraries purchased them in 2022.

Processing Information

The bulk of processing was completed in 2022 and 2023.

Repository Details

Part of the Betsey B. Creekmore Special Collections and University Archives, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Repository

Contact:
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville TN 37996 USA
865-974-4480