‘Allan Rohan Crite: Urban Glory’
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum offers a broad view of Crite and his life in an exhibition co-curated by Diana Seave Greenwald, curator of the collection at the museum, and Theodore C. Landsmark, distinguished professor at Northeastern University, Crite’s friend and frequent collaborator.
Allan Rohan Crite: Urban Glory presents 117 works—oil paintings, watercolors, drawings, works on paper, lithographs, books and collages.
In
the anteroom to the exhibition in the museum’s Hostetter Gallery,
viewers are invited to “Meet Mr. Crite.” A gently audible soundscape by
musician Danny Rivera braids street sounds and church music. A timeline
presents milestones in Crite’s astonishing productive life. Among the
writings and artworks on view are a 1932 self-portrait, a picture of the
Gardner Museum Courtyard drawn by Crite at age 11, beautiful ink
illustrations from a 1937 publication, “Three Spirituals from Earth to
Heaven,” and a host of Crite’s self-published essays and pamphlets.
His
paintings from the 1930s through the 1950s have a pared down style
influenced by African-inspired mid-century modernism. With zest for the
music of human movement and the patterns visible in daily life — from
swirling skirts to the shapes of row houses, Crite recorded what he saw
in a warm amber palette often accented by signature dabs of yellow.
Crite liked facts, and his 40 years as an illustrator at the Charlestown Navy Yard honed his eye for details.
The
Hostetter installation presents works by theme, beginning with Crite’s
Neighborhood Series of the 1930s and 1940s, showcasing scenes of daily
life in his neighborhood. “Parade on Hammond Street” (1935) renders
high-stepping marchers and smartly dressed onlookers. “Harriet and Leon”
(1941) portrays its elegant subjects in profile as they stride by two
curious boys. In the distance, under a mottled winter sky, a man unloads
boxes of ice from his truck and a boy pulls a child on a sled.
“School’s Out” (1936) shows a river of bobbing heads in the schoolyard;
and closeup, mothers and children; and across the street, an elegantly
clad woman strutting solo.
These
street scenes gradually evolved, reflecting “urban removal” as Crite
called it. His watercolor “Burning and Digging: South End Housing
Project” (1940) is an energetic semi-abstract depiction of a bulldozer
razing a brick wall. In “Sunlight and Shadow” (1941), Crite portrays
women and babies in the dappled light of leafy Madison Park, a now lost
urban retreat.
A
devout Episcopalian, Crite painted what he saw — as well as what he
believed. In his religious drawings and paintings, Crite’s holy figures
have dark skins. His powerful 12-panel “Stations of the Cross” (about
1947) rendered on linoleum with hand-applied watercolor and metal leaf,
pairs each image of Christ’s path to crucifixion and burial with a
closeup of the feet. Crite’s paintings of rituals in the Church of St.
Augustine and St. Martin, where he and his parents worshiped, are rich
in light and shadow.
In
the late 1940s he began injecting surreal apparitions into his street
scenes. In his watercolor “Streetcar Madonna” (1961), a Black Madonna
and Child are surrounded by commuters oblivious to their presence.
In
a 1968 interview, Crite described himself as a “liturgical artist” and
in his art and writings encouraged active participation in “the drama of
redemption” — to care for the disempowered and overlooked. In his
watercolor “Our Lady of the Migrant Workers” (1961), a brown Madonna and
Child sit among field workers.
In
1959, at age 40, Crite turned from oil painting to printmaking, a
medium that enabled him to widely disseminate his images. Wall displays
and a video show his art-packed home, where he installed a Multilith
press and hosted neighbors and fellow artists, including members of the
Boston Collective, a group of Black artists he organized in 1979. Crite
dreamed of converting his South End row house into a house museum.
Instead, the house was sold.
But
Crite’s ever-growing legacy lives on in these exhibitions, which, in
the Hostetter Gallery, concludes with a work by two Boston Collective
members, Johnetta Tinker and Susan Thompson. Their quilt painted with
neighborhood scenes in four seasons, “Deeply Rooted In the NeighborHOOD,
Homage to Allan Rohan Crite” (2021), captures Crite’s exuberance.
In
a first-floor gallery, Greenwald has curated “Visions of Black
Madonnas,” which presents Madonnas by Crite with two treasures from the
Gardner’s collection. One is a “Black Glass Madonna” (1570-1591) in
shimmering glass with gold robes and a gem-encrusted crown, commissioned
by Archduke Ferdinand II of Austria as a tribute to Our Lady of Loreto,
a dark-skinned, miracle-working Madonna. Also on view is the ornate
late-Gothic painting “The Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints and
Angels” (1355–60) by Bartolomeo Bulgarini. They are accompanied by 13
Madonnas by Crite, among the many he composed and then printed by the
thousands for church bulletin covers of parishes in and well beyond
Boston — even learning Spanish to serve new neighbors in the South End.
On
the facade of the Gardner Museum is “Allan Crite — American Griot”
(2025) by Gardner Museum artist-in-residence Robert T. Freeman. Crite
has a liturgical presence. Wearing a long blue robe, he is surrounded by
figures from paintings he created in the tradition of a griot, a West
African storyteller who is steward of a community’s culture and values.
ON THE WEB
Learn more at gardnermuseum.org