painter (artist); muralist; sculptor; college teacher
Personal Information
Born on November 28, 1907, in Charlotte, North Carolina, died on April 27, 1977; father Primus Priss Alston was a minister; married Myra Logan, a surgeon.
Education: Graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School, New York; Columbia College, New York, B.A., 1929; Teachers' College, Columbia University, M.A., 1931; later studied at National Academy of Art, New York, and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York.
Career
Painter, sculptor, and art educator. Worked as magazine illustrator, 1930s and early 1940s; painted major murals for Harlem Hospital, New York, 1936; staff artist, Office of War Information and Public Relations, World War II; became first black instructor, Art Students' League, 1950, teaching there until 1971; became first black instructor, Museum of Modern Art, 1956; professor, City College of New York, 1970-77.
Life's Work
Fusing modern art styles with non-Western influences to create a new and distinctive African-American idiom, Charles Henry Alston was among the most important figures of the Harlem (New York) creative community in the field of the visual arts. Alston was also a pioneering educator whose students included several of the most prominent African-American artists of the twentieth century. All through his long career, Alston remained a student of art himself, responding to contemporary artistic and historical developments and incorporating new approaches into his work.
Alston, nicknamed "Spinky," was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, on November 28, 1907. His father, the Rev. Primus Priss Alston, was born into slavery and attended divinity school after emancipation; he died when Alston was three years old. Alston's mother then married Harry Pierce Bearden, an uncle of the artist Romare Bearden--who later became one of Alston's own students. The family moved to New York in 1913, but the five Alston children (of which Charles Henry was the youngest) often returned to North Carolina to visit relatives. Alston showed artistic ability from a young age, making sculptures out of the red clay found everywhere in North Carolina.
Influenced by Alain Locke
Attending New York's DeWitt Clinton High School, Alston began to find recognition for his talents. He won a school art prize at age 14 and served as art editor of the school magazine. Thus encouraged to study art when he enrolled at Columbia University in New York, Alston graduated in 1929. During his student years he came under the influence of the black philosopher and cultural theorist Alain Locke, who had urged black artists to look to African forms for ways of expressing the African-American experience.
Alston stayed on at Columbia for graduate work and earned an M.A. in 1931. Working for a time with young people in various posts (where, during one stint with the Boys' Clubs organization, he spotted the emerging talent of the later-famous African-American artist Jacob Lawrence), Alston earned a living mostly as an illustrator. Well-acquainted with such Harlem luminaries as poet Langston Hughes and bandleader Duke Ellington, he illustrated publications, record covers, and other items released by the foremost black creative figures of the day. Alston's work was also featured in mainstream commercial publications such as Redbook and the New Yorker.
In the 1930s, as he worked to apply Locke's ideas, Alston gained recognition as a serious artist. His work was first shown in museums in 1934, as part of a traveling exhibition organized by the Harmon Foundation, and his paintings and sculptures were shown around New York through the 1930s. Such works as the painting Two Sisters (1935) were influenced by African masks. Alston was not merely imitating African styles, however, but using their strong geometric orientation to create works that could stand with the latest developments in abstract modernism that were emanating from Europe.
Encountered Mexican Mural School
Alston also came under another non-Western influence in the 1930s--that of Mexican muralists, including Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco, who painted enormous, dramatic works of public art that reflected the ferment of political changes that had occurred in their own country. Rivera had worked in the United States in the 1930s, and many art critics embraced his often radical-spirited works as part of a general artistic response to the problems of the Great Depression.
Alston, who also drew inspiration from the classical public art of Michelangelo and others, applied the ambitious dimensions of Mexican murals in a giant pair of murals installed at New York's Harlem Hospital, Magic and Medicine and Modern Medicine. These works, depicting the whole span of medical practices in African America from African-derived conjure practices to the use of modern hospital technology, were pioneering examples of art works that drew on African-American history. They were funded by the Depression-era Works Progress Administration (WPA) art project, for which Alston served as one of the first African-American supervisors, and were exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art before their permanent installation. Alston married a Harlem Hospital surgeon, Myra Logan.
As World War II broke out, Alston continued to work in the arena of public art. He served in the U.S. Army and was appointed a staff artist for the Office of War Information and Public Relations. After the war, with a growing body of work that included a series of portraits of black southerners, again influenced by the geometric shapes of African art, Alston continued to gain wider recognition. He found his services in demand as a teacher, becoming the first African-American instructor at the Art Students' League in 1950 and again at the Museum of Modern Art in 1956. Galleries in New York and elsewhere began to devote space to solo exhibitions of his work.
Painted Portraits of Black Leaders
Alston continued to change with the times, inflecting his work to match contemporary trends in the art world but never abandoning his personal style. In the 1950s, at the height of the craze for modernist abstraction, he created paintings that contained very little representation of the human form or of recognizable scenes, concentrating on effects achieved by the use of closely related colors. In the 1960s, however, as the civil rights movement gained steam, Alston returned to more accessible styles. He produced startlingly close-up portraits of figures from black history such as Frederick Douglass and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (the latter was exhibited at Detroit's Museum of African American History in 2002), as well as images of more general types (such as a series of blues singers) that used distortions of the face of the painted figure to illuminate or comment upon some aspect of the subject's experience. Alston was a founding member of Spiral, a group of African-American artists who united to promote the cause of racial equality.
Active until the very end of his life, Alston was appointed to the art faculty of the City University of New York in 1970 and became a full professor in 1973. In later life he also coordinated a children's art center at the World's Fair in Brussels, Belgium. Alston died in New York on April 27, 1977. His works are owned by such major institutions as New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Detroit Institute of Arts; Rhapsodies in Black, a traveling exhibition of the 1990s that formed a major retrospective evaluation of art in Harlem between the world wars, included an overview of his career.
Awards
Arthur Wesley Dow Fellowship, Columbia University, 1929; Rosenwald Fellowships, 1939-40; National Institute of Arts and Letters grant, 1958; named to American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1958.
Works
Selected works
Further Reading
Books
— James M. Manheim
| Charles Alston | |
|---|---|
Charles Alston in 1939 |
|
| Birth name | Charles Henry Alston |
| Born | November 28, 1907 Charlotte, North Carolina |
| Died | April 27, 1977 (aged 69) New York City |
| Nationality | American |
| Field | Muralism, Painting, Illustration, Sculpture |
| Training | Columbia University, Teacher's College |
| Movement | Abstract expressionism |
| Patrons | Lemoine Pierce |
| Influenced by | Aaron Douglas |
| Influenced | Jean Lacy, Jacob Lawrence |
Charles Henry Alston (November 28, 1907 – April 27, 1977) was an African-American painter, sculptor, illustrator, muralist and teacher who lived and worked in the New York City neighborhood of Harlem. Alston was active in the Harlem Renaissance; Alston was the first African American supervisor for the Works Progress Administration's Federal Art Project. Known for his murals at the Harlem Hospital and the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building. In 1990 Alston's bust of Martin Luther King, Jr. became the first image of an African American displayed at the White House.
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Contents
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Charles Henry Alston was born on November 28, 1907 in Charlotte, North Carolina to Reverend Primus Priss Alston and Anna Elizabeth Miller Alston, and was the youngest of five children.[1][2][3] Only three survived past infancy: His sister Rousmaniere, and his brothers Wendell and Charles.[1][4] His father was born into slavery in 1851 in Pittsboro, North Carolina; after the Civil War, he graduated from St. Augustine's College and became a prominent minister and founder of St. Michael's Episcopal Church. He was described as a "race man": an African American who dedicated his skills to the furtherance of the black race.[1][2][3] Reverend Alston met his wife when she was a student at his school. Charles was nicknamed "Spinky" by his father, and kept the nickname as an adult. In 1910, when Charles was three, his father died suddenly of a cerebral hemorrhage. Locals described him in admiration as the "Booker T. Washington of Charlotte".[1][3]
In 1913 Anna Alston married Harry Bearden. Through the marriage, the future artist Romare Bearden became Charles’ cousin. The two Bearden families lived across the street from each other; the friendship between Romare and Charles would last a lifetime.[1][3][4] As a child Alston was inspired by his older brother Wendell's drawings of trains and cars, which the young artist copied.[1][5] Charles also played with clay, creating a sculpture of North Carolina. As an adult he reflected on his memories of sculpting with clay as a child: "I’d get buckets of it and put it through strainers and make things out of it. I think that's the first art experience I remember, making things."[1] His mother was a gifted embroiderer and took up painting at the age of 75. His father was gifted at drawing as well, wooing Alston's mother with small sketches in the medians of letters he wrote her.[1][3]
In 1915 the family moved to New York, as many African-American families did during the Great Migration.[1][2][3][6] Alston's step-father, Henry Bearden, left before his wife and children to secure a job overseeing elevator operations and the newsstand staff at the Bretton Hotel in the Upper West Side. The family lived in Harlem and was considered middle-class. During the Great Depression, the people of Harlem suffered economically. The "stoic strength" seen within the community was later expressed in Charles’ fine art.[1] At Public School 179 in Manhattan, the boy's artistic abilities were recognized and he was asked to draw all of the school posters during his years there.[3]
Alston graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School, where he was nominated for academic excellence and was the art editor of the school's magazine, The Magpie. He was a member of the Arista - National Honor Society and also studied drawing and anatomy at the Saturday school of the National Academy of Art .[1][2][3] In high school he was given his first oil paints and learned about his aunt Bessye Bearden's art salons, which stars like Duke Ellington and Langston Hughes attended. After graduating in 1925, he attended Columbia University, turning down a scholarship to the Yale School of Fine Arts.[1][2][3][5] Alston entered the pre-architectural program only to lose interest upon seeing the lack of success many African American architects had in the field. After also experimenting with pre-med, he decided that math, physics and chemistry "was not just my bag" and he entered the fine arts program. During his time at Columbia he joined Alpha Phi Alpha, worked on the university's Columbia Daily Spectator and drew cartoons for the school's magazine Jester.[1][3] He also hung out in Harlem restaurants and clubs, where his love for jazz and black music would be fostered. In 1929 he graduated and received a fellowship to study at Teachers College, where he obtained his Master's in 1931.[1][3]
For the years 1942–1943 Alston was stationed in the army at Fort Huachuca in Arizona. Upon returning to New York on April 8, 1944, he married Dr. Myra Adele Logan, an intern at the Harlem Hospital. They met when he was working on a mural project at the hospital. Their home, including his studio, as on Edgecombe Avenue near Highbridge Park. The couple lived close to family; at their frequent gatherings Alston enjoyed cooking and Myra played piano. During the 1940s Alston also took occasional art classes studying under Alexander Kostellow.
In January 1977 Myra Logan died. Months later on April 27, 1977, Charles Spinky Alston died after a long bout with cancer.[1][3] His memorial service was held at St. Martins Episcopal Church on May 21, 1977 in New York City.[7]
While obtaining his master's degree, Alston was the boys’ work director at the Utopia Children's House, started by James Lesesne Wells.[1][6] He also began teaching at the Harlem Arts Workshop, founded by Augusta Savage in the basement of what is now the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.[1][3][6] Alston's teaching style was influenced by the work of John Dewey, Arthur Wesley Dow, and Thomas Munro. During this period, Alston began to teach the 10-year old Jacob Lawrence, whom he strongly influenced.[1][3][8] Alston was introduced to African art by the poet Alain Locke.[1][3][5][6] In the late 1920s Alston joined Bearden and other black artists who refused to exhibit in William E. Harmon Foundation shows, which featured all-black artists in their traveling exhibits. Alston and his friends thought the exhibits were curated for a white audience, a form of segregation which the men protested. They did not want to be set aside but exhibited on the same level as art peers of every skin color.[3]
In 1938 the Rosenwald Fund provided money for Alston to travel to the South, which was his first return there since leaving as a child. His travel with Giles Hubert, an inspector for the Farm Security Administration, gave him access to certain situations and he photographed many aspects of rural life.[1][2][6] These photographs serves as the basis for a series of genre portraits' depicting southern black life. In 1940 he completed Tobacco Farmer, the portrait of a young black farmer in white overalls and a blue shirt with a youthful yet serious look upon his face, sitting in front of the landscape and buildings he works on and in. That same year he received a second round of funding from the Rosenwald Fund to travel South, and he spent extended time at Atlanta University.[1]
During the 1930s and early 1940s, Alston created illustrations for magazines such as Fortune, Mademoiselle, The New Yorker, Melody Maker and others.[1][3] He also designed album covers for artists such as Duke Ellington and Coleman Hawkins.[3] Alston became staff artist at the Office of War Information and Public Relations in 1940, creating drawings of notable African Americans. These images were used in over 200 black newspapers across the country by the government to "foster goodwill with the black citizenry,".[6][9]
Eventually Alston left commercial work to focus on his own artwork. In 1950, he became the first African-American instructor at the Art Students League, where he remained on faculty until 1971.[1][2][6] In 1950, his Painting was exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and his artwork was one of few purchased by the museum.[6] He landed his first solo exhibition in 1953 at the John Heller Gallery, who represented artists such as Roy Lichtenstein. He exhibited there five times from 1953–1958.
In 1956, he became the first African-American instructor at the Museum of Modern Art, where he taught for a year before going to Belgium on behalf of MOMA and the State Department. He coordinated the children's community center at Expo 58. In 1958 he was awarded a grant from and was elected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[1][2][3]
In 1963, Alston co-founded Spiral with Romare Bearden and Hale Woodruff.[1][2][3][6] Spiral served as a collective of conversation and artistic exploration for a large group of artists who "addressed how black artists should relate to American society in a time of segregation." Artists and arts supporters gathered for Spiral, such as Emma Amos, Perry Ferguson and Merton Simpson.[1][5] [10] This group served as the 1960s version of 306, and Alston was described as an "intellectual activist." In 1968, he spoke at Columbia about his activism and in the mid-1960s Spiral created an exhibition of black and white artworks. But, the exhibition was never officially sponsored by the group due to inner-group disagreements.[1]
In 1968, Alston received a presidential appointment from Lyndon Johnson to the National Council of Culture and the Arts. Mayor John Lindsay appointed him to the New York City Art Commission in 1969.[6] He was made full professor at City College of New York in 1973 where he had taught since 1968.[1][2] In 1975 he was awarded the first Distinguished Alumni Award from Teachers College.[1] The Art Student's League created a 21-year merit scholarship in 1977 under Alston's name to commemorate each year of his tenure.[3]
Alston shared studio space with Henry Bannarn at 306 W. 141st St, which served as an open space for artists, photographers, musicians, writers and the like. Other artists held studio space at 306, such as Jacob Lawrence, Addison Bate and his brother Leon.[1][3][6][10] During this time Alston founded the Harlem Artists’ Guild with Savage and Elba Lightfoot to work towards equality in WPA art programs in New York. During the early years of 306, Alston focused on mastering portraiture. Early works such as Portrait of a Man (1929) show Alston's detailed and realistic style depicted through pastels and charcoals, inspired by the style of Winold Reiss. In his Girl in a Red Dress (1934) and The Blue Shirt (1935), he used modern and innovative techniques for his portraits of young individuals in Harlem. Blue Shirt is thought to be a portrait of Jacob Lawrence. During this time he also created Man Seated with Travel Bag (c. 1938–40), showing the seedy and bleak environment, contrasting with work like the racially charged Vaudeville (c. 1930) and its caricature style of a man in blackface.[1]
Inspired from his trip South, Alston began his "family series" in the 1940s.[1][3] Intensity and angularity come through in the faces of the youth in his portraits Untitled (Portrait of a Girl) and Untitled (Portrait of a Boy). These works also show the influence that African sculpture had on his portraiture, showing, with Portrait of a Boy showing more cubist features. Later family portraits show Alston's exploration of religious symbolism, color, form and space. His family group portraits are often faceless, which Alston states is the way that white America views blacks. Paintings such as Family (1955) show a woman seated and a man standing with two children – the parents seem almost solemn while the children are described as hopeful and with a use of color made famous by Cézanne. In Family Group (c. 1950) Alston's use of grey and ochre tones brings together the parents and son as if one with geometric patterns connecting them together as if a puzzle. The simplicity of the look, style and emotion upon the family is reflective and probably inspired by Alston's trip south. His work during this time has been described as being "characterized by his reductive use of form combined with a sun-hued". During this time he also started to experiment with ink and wash painting seen in work like Portrait of a Woman (1955) as well as creating portraits to illustrate the music surrounding him in Harlem. Blues Singer #4 shows a female singer on stage with a white flower on her shoulder and a bold red dress, reminisecent of Ella Fitzgerald.[1][3] Girl in a Red Dress is thought to may be Bessie Smith, for whom he drew many times when she was recording and performing. Jazz was an important influence in Alston's work and socila life, representing itself in other works like Jazz (1950) and Harlem at Night.[1]
The 1960s civil rights movement influenced his work heavily with artworks influenced by inequality and race relations in the United States. One of his few religious artworks was created in 1960, Christ Head, with an angular "Modiglianiesque" portrait of Jesus Christ. Seven years later he created You never really meant it, did you, Mr. Charlie? which, in a similar style as Christ Head shows a black man standing against a red sky "looking as frustrated as any individual can look", according to Alston.[1]
Experimenting with the use of negative space and organic forms in the late 1940s, by the mid-1950s Alston began creating notably modernist style paintings. Woman with Flowers (1949) has been described as a tribute to Modigliani and African art makes another strong appearance in Ceremonial (1950). Untitled works during the era show his use of color overlay using muted colors to create simple layered abstracts of still live. Symbol (1953) relates to Picasso's Guernica, which was a favorite work of Alston's.[1] His final work of the 1950s, Walking serves as a precursor to the 1960s: civil rights movement. The painting, which was inspired by the Montgomery Bus Boycott, has come to represent "the surge of energy among African Americans to organize in their struggle for full equality."[11] About the artwork, Alston is quoted "The idea of a march was growing...It was in the air...and this painting just came. I called it Walking on purpose. It wasn't the militancy that you saw later. It was a very definite walk-not going back, no hesitation."[1][12]
The civil rights movement of the 1960s was a major influence on Alston. Considered to be one of his most powerful and impressive periods in the late 1950s he began working in black and white up until the mid-1960s. Some of the works are simple abstracts of black ink on white paper, similar to a Rorschach test. Untitled (c. 1960s) shows a boxing match in great simplicity with an attempt to express the drama of the fight through few brushstrokes. Alston worked with oil-on-Masonite during this period as well, utilizing impasto, cream and ochre to create a moody cave-like artwork. Black and White #1 (1959) is one of Alston's more "monumental" works. Gray, white and black come together to fight for space on an abstract canvas, in a softer form than the more harsh Franz Kline. Alston continued to explore the relationship between monochromatic hues throughout the series which Wardlaw describes as "some of the most profoundly beautiful works of twentieth-century American art."[1]
In the beginning Charles Alston's mural work was inspired by the work of Aaron Douglas, Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco, the latter who he met when they did mural work in New York.[3] In 1943 Alston was elected to the board of directors of the National Society of Mural Painters. He created murals for the Harlem Hospital, Golden State Mutual, American Museum of Natural History, Public School 154, the Bronx Family and Criminal Court and the Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, New York.[1][3]
Originally hired as an easel painter, in 1935 Alston became the first African American supervisor to work for the WPA's Federal Art Project in New York, which would also serve as his first mural work.[1][3][6][10] At this time he was awarded WPA Project Number 1262 – an opportunity to oversee a group of artists creating murals and to supervise their painting for the Harlem Hospital.[1] The first government commission ever awarded to African American artists including Beauford Delaney, Seabrook Powell and Vertis Hayes.[3] He also had the chance to create and paint his own contribution to the collection: Magic in Medicine and Modern Medicine.[1][2][6] These paintings were part of a diptych completed in 1936 depicting the history of medicine in the African American community and Beauford Delaney served as assistant.[1][10] When creating the murals Alston was inspired by the work of Aaron Douglas, who a year earlier had created the public art piece Aspects of Negro Life for the New York Public Library, and researched traditional African culture, including traditional African medicine. Magic in Medicine, which depicts African culture and holistic healing, is considered one of "America's first public scenes of Africa". All of the murals sketches submitted were accepted by the FAP, however, four were denied creation by the hospital superintendent Lawrence T. Dermody and commissioner of hospitals S.S. Goldwater due to the excessive amount of African-American representation in the works.[1][3][6][13] The artists fought the response through letter writing and four years later succeeded in gaining the right to complete the murals.[1][3] The sketches for Magic in Medicine and Modern Medicine were exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art's "New Horizons in American Art".[1][3][10]
Alston's murals were hung in the Women's Pavilion of the hospital over uncapped radiators which caused the paintings to deteriorate from the steam. Plans failed to recap the radiators. In 1959 Alston estimated, in a letter to the Department of Public Works, that the conservation would cost $1,500 but the funds were never acquired. In 1968, after Martin Luther King Jr.'s death, Alston was asked to create another mural for the hospital to be placed in a pavilion named after the assassinated civil rights leader titled Man Emerging from the Darkness of Poverty and Ignorance into the Light of a Better World". After Alston's death in 1977 a committee was formed, unable to raise funds for conservation on the original murals. In 1991 the Municipal Art Society's Adopt-a-Mural program was launched and the Harlem Hospital murals were chosen. A grant from Alston's sister Rousmaniere Wilson and step-sister Aida Bearden Winters assisted in completing a restoration of the works in 1993.[3] In 2005 Harlem Hospital announced a $2 million project to conserve Alston's murals and three other pieces in the original commissioned project as part of a $225 million dollar hospital expansion.[1][3]
In the late 1940s Alston became involved in a mural project commissioned by Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company which asked the artists to create work involving African American contributions to the settling of California. Alston worked with Hale Woodruff on the murals in a large studio space in New York where they utilized ladders to reach the upper parts of the canvas.[1][10] The artworks, which are considered "priceless contributions to American narrative art", consists of two panels: Exploration and Colonization by Alston and Settlement and Development by Woodruff. Alston's piece covers the post-colonial period of 1527 to 1850. Images of James Beckworth, Biddy Mason, and William Leidesdorff are portrayed in the well detailed historical mural. While both artists kept in contact with African Americans on the West Coast during its creation, influencing the content and depictions. The murals, which were unveiled in 1949, have been on display in the lobby of the Golden State Mutual Headquarters.[1][10] Due to economic downturn Golden State was forced to sell their entire art collection to ward off its mounting debts and as of spring 2011 the National Museum of African American History and Culture had offered $750,000 to purchase the artworks which led to a controversy regarding the importance of the artworks which have been estimated to be worth at least $5 million. It was requested that the murals be covered by city landmark protections by the Los Angeles Conservancy. The state of California had declined philanthropic proposals to keep the murals in their original location and the Smithsonian withdrew their offer. The murals are currently awaiting their fate in California courts.[14][15]
Alston also created sculptures. Head of a Woman (1957) shows his move towards a "reductive and modern approach to sculpture....where facial features were suggested rather than fully formulated in three dimensions,".[1] In 1970 Alston was commissioned by the Community Church of New York to create a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. for $5,000, with limited copies produced.[16][17] In 1990 Alston's bronze bust of Martin Luther King Jr. (1970), became the first image of an African American displayed in the White House.[1][18]
Art critic Emily Genauer stated that Altson "refused to be pigeonholed", regarding his varied exploration in his artwork.[1] Patron Lemoine Pierce said of Alston's work: "Never thought of as an innovative artist, Alston generally ignored popular art trends and violated many mainstream art conventions; he produced abstract and figurative paintings often simultaneously, refusing to be stylistically consistent, and during his 40-year career he worked prolifically and unapologetically in both commercial and fine art." Romare Bearden described Alston as "...one of the most versatile artists whose enormous skill led him to a diversity of styles..." Bearden also describes the professionalism and impact that Alston had on Harlem and the African American community: "'was a consummate artist and a voice in the development of African American art who never doubted the excellence of all people's sensitivity and creative ability. During his long professional career, Alston significantly enriched the cultural life of Harlem. In a profound sense, he was a man who built bridges between Black artists in varying fields, and between other Americans."[3] Writer June Jordan described Alston as "an American artist of first magnitude, and he is a Black American artist of undisturbed integrity."[19]
Media related to Charles Alston at Wikimedia Commons
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