Featured on PDR in the collection Sheet Music Covers for the Gotham-Attucks Company, ca. 1905–1911

We are all unfortunately immersed in the visual legacy of Blackface minstrelsy. Caricatures that mutated Black men into creatures, women into mockeries — offensive ornamentation designed to highlight a lascivious, criminalized otherness. One of the key ways these racist imaginaries seeped into the Western subconscious was through the proliferation of print material, and particularly through the covers of sheet music brought home to play around the parlor piano. These images appeared on music written by both Black and white artists, as the standard of presentation. And yet, beginning in 1905, one star-studded song-publishing company would push the aesthetic limits of how Black popular music was shown to the public.

Alex Rogers and Bert A. Williams, “Let It Alone”

Date

1906


Underlying Rights

Public Domain U.S.

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

  • No associated rights statement on Internet Archive. However, source confirmed by email no additional rights.
  • We offer this info as guidance only

  • Exceptional quality, from $32 including delivery
  • Archival inks on high grade art paper
  • Framed option with solid wood and ready to hang

Image Size

1569 x 2030

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