American artist Allan Rohan Crite described himself as an “artist-reporter,” and this painting shows that ethic clearly. Made in 1936, the year he finished his studies at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and while he was working within the WPA era, the picture records children leaving the annex of Everett Elementary School in Boston’s South End, where boys and girls were taught separately. A wide city street opens in bright afternoon light as a crowd of schoolchildren pours out from a brick school building and fenced yard. Most of the figures are girls, joined here and there by adult women who seem to be mothers, older sisters, or caretakers. Crite arranges them in small clusters so the painting feels lively but never chaotic. Some children stroll shoulder to shoulder, some hurry ahead, some pause to talk, and one pair appears caught in a brief disagreement. Dresses, bows, hats, socks, and polished shoes vary from child to child, giving each girl her own presence rather than reducing the group to a pattern. The sidewalks are clean, the school and neighboring apartments are carefully kept, and the whole scene feels structured, observant, and full of motion. Although dozens of figures appear, the mood is intimate. This is not a spectacle but a neighborhood moment, seen with care from within community life. The painting reaches beyond one place. Rather than portraying Black urban life through stereotype or hardship alone, Crite insists on dignity, order, individuality, and shared belonging. Even during the Depression, he paints a stable neighborhood whose strength comes from family, schooling, and mutual care. The women and girls are central to that meaning. They carry the rhythm of the scene and embody continuity between home, street, and school. The result is both documentary and quietly radical for a vision of Black everyday life as dignified, self-possessed, and worthy of lasting record.
“School’s Out” by Allan Rohan Crite (American) - Oil on canvas / 1936 - Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, District of Columbia) #WomenInArt #art #artText #AllanRohanCrite #Crite #SmithsonianAmericanArtMuseum #SAAMuseum #AmericanArt #BlackArtist #AfricanAmericanArt #BlackArt #1930sArt