b. 1902d. 1973

Arna Bontemps


Arna Bontemps
A friend of Langston Hughes and a figure in the Harlem Renaissance, Arna Bontemps was a poet, novelist, and an important literary preserver of African American culture. Photo: Arna Bontemps, photo by Carl Van Vechten in 1939, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

Audio

“Southern Mansions” (from “From the Dark Tower”)
Daveda Karanas, mezzo-soprano; Michael Ippolito, piano; Karla Hamelin, cello3:51

Dorothy Rudd Moore

Composer

Arna Bontemps

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2022

Date

University of California, Irvine, Winifred Smith Hall

Location

This recording was part of a 10am concert ("In Memorium – Dorothy Rudd Moore 1940–2022") on Saturday, October 15, 2022 during the 25th Anniversary African American Art Song Alliance Conference. The concert venue was Winifred Smith Hall at the University of California, Irvine.

About

Born in Alexandria, Louisiana, Arna Bontemps’ family moved to Los Angeles when he was three. He graduated from Pacific Union College in 1923 and moved to Harlem to become a teacher, right at the dawning of the Harlem Renaissance. Bontemps immediately began to win prizes for his writing and became quick friends with Langston Hughes.

Because of the Great Depression, financial hardships for he, his wife, and six children forced Bontemps to relocate his family to Alabama for a new teaching post in 1931. Several years later, he took a position as Head Librarian at Fisk University in Tennessee.

Bontemps’ writing is marked by his dedication to African American cultural heritage and anger at injustice. His poetry has been set to music by many American composers, including William Grant Still, and foreign composers, such as Hermann Reutter.

–Christie Finn
Source: Poetry Foundation website

Video

Books

God Sends Sunday

Arna Bontemps

Sheet Music