Jacob Lawrence Project

In 1994, under the leadership of National Bar Institute (NBI) Chair Ernestine Sapp, the NBI launched the Jacob Lawrence Art Project working with renowned artist Jacob Lawrence. Lawrence produced “Lawyers and Clients”, a limited-edition work that generated proceeds from the sale of serigraphs, prints, posters and note cards until 2020. Proceeds benefit the NBI’s programs.

Since Lawrence’s death in 2000, his art, including “Lawyers and Clients”, has increased significantly in value. He is recognized as a major figure in American art. He was a talented artist who believed that the “Negro struggle is a symbol of the struggle of all mankind.” Lawrence often drew American experience in his boldly colored works to invoke the human experience in a way which transcends race and gender. Lawrence gained national recognition in 1941 when he became the first black artist to exhibit in a major New York gallery and consequently, was the first to receive national press coverage (including a profile in ART news in 1944).

From his early training as an artist in Central Harlem to his retirement from teaching at the University of Washington in Seattle, Jacob Lawrence approached the creative process the way he approached his life — with honesty and emotional integrity matched by few artists of his generation. He believed firmly that art can affect change without being pedantic; and that beauty resides equally in forms as in content. For him harmony was both an aesthetic and a social concept.