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Perry Watkins - Case of Philip Lawrence: Red uniform with grey trousers and rectangular concertina

Case of Philip Lawrence: Red uniform with grey trousers and rectangular concertina (1934-1943)

Perry Watkins (American, 1907-1974 )
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
This work was commissioned by the United States federal government as part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) program. It is not subject to copyright protection.

Perry Watkins was the first African American set designer on Broadway. He was also a stage painter, makeup and costume artist, producer, and film art director.

Born in Providence, Rhode Island on April 13, 1907, Watkins attended Hope High School where he and a friend hand wrote and decorated a daily newspaper called “The Foolscape.” Awarded a scholarship to study art at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1926, he studied figure drawing under Vincent Bernasconi and still life under Asa G. Randall, the school’s most prominent artists.

Despite having his paintings displayed at the Springfield (Massachusetts) Museum and the Providence Art Club, he struggled financially and worked as a waiter, chauffeur, insurance salesman, reporter, draftsmen, and commercial illustrator. By 1936, unemployed and broke, he applied to the Federal Theatre Project with a sample production, and was quickly employed.

Starting as a stagehand and becoming assistant technical director at Lafayette Theatre in New York City, he began a flurry of work, painting drops, dying costumes, and operating the lighting for several shows.

In 1939 Watkins made a breakthrough, becoming the first black Broadway set designer when he was commissioned by Guthrie McClintock for Mamba’s Daughters.

As a result of the show’s incredible success and a recommendation by Robert Edmond Jones, Watkins was permitted to take the drafting and art exam for admission into the Set Designer’s Union. He passed it easily and became the first African American to be admitted. In 1939 he taught in the Rose McClendon Workshop Theatre and the following year designed the set for the revival of The Big White Fog at Lincoln Theatre in Harlem.

Later in life he ventured into film and television, working on art direction and design for films such as Hercules in New York (1969) which debuted Arnold Schwarzenegger, Come Back, Charleston Blue (1972), the critically acclaimed blaxploitation film Across 110th Street (1972), and Gordon’s War (1973).

Perry Robert Watkins passed away August 14, 1974 in New York City at the age of 66.

In Collection: Federal Theatre Project (View all 1212)

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Twelfth Night: Olivia (1934-1943)

Robert Byrne (American, 19th/20th century)
Chalk Dust

Chalk Dust (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Chalk Dust

Chalk Dust (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Haiti

Haiti (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Days Without End

Days Without End (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Sleeping Beauty: Green coat over light green tunic, mustard hose, and pointed green slippers

Sleeping Beauty: Green coat over light green tunic, mustard hose, and pointed green slippers (1934-1943)

John Glidden (American, 19th/20th century)
Candide: Unidentified Character in Black Bodysuit, Silver Sash, and Green Cape

Candide: Unidentified Character in Black Bodysuit, Silver Sash, and Green Cape (1934-1943)

Alex Jones (American, 19th/20th century)
Valley Forge: Lafayette

Valley Forge: Lafayette (1934-1943)

Dorothe van Dunker
Judgment Day

Judgment Day (1934-1943)

Anonymous
The Sap

The Sap (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Life and Death of an American: 1st Street Corner Girl

Life and Death of an American: 1st Street Corner Girl (1934-1943)

Alex Jones (American, 19th/20th century)
Pirates of Penzance: Ninth Pirate Chauncey

Pirates of Penzance: Ninth Pirate Chauncey (1934-1943)

John Glidden (American, 19th/20th century)
Squaring the Circle: Back-Drop Design (Surrealist Carnival Imagery)

Squaring the Circle: Back-Drop Design (Surrealist Carnival Imagery) (1934-1943)

Leo Preston
Puppet Pageant

Puppet Pageant (1934-1943)

Anonymous
Mikado

Mikado (1934-1943)

Anonymous
View all 1212 Artworks

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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
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