Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
Painting of a crowded bar scene where African American people dance and drink together, some sitting at the bar, some at small tables, and many on the dance floor.

Nightlife

1943

Archibald John Motley Jr. (American, 1891–1981)

Chicago

A palpable energy and sense of movement enliven Nightlife, Archibald Motley’s portrayal of a crowded cabaret in the South Side neighborhood of Bronzeville in Chicago. With stylized figures, an array of diagonal lines, and heightened colors keyed to shades of magenta and violet, the artist captured the exuberance of city dwellers out on the town. Motley created a network of gestures and glances among the people, drawing attention to the various social interactions that animate the scene.

The composition is an exploration of artificial lighting. Motley was inspired, in part, to paint Nightlife after having seen Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks (1942.51), which had entered the Art Institute’s collection the prior year.

Oil on canvas

African American artists

Chicago Artists

Drinking and Dining

African Diaspora

Essentials

SAIC Alumni and Faculty

Arts of the Americas