In 1970, Brown moved from Chicago to New York City's
SoHo neighborhood which at the time was home to many artists, musicians, writers and dancers. There he collaborated on multi-media projects with other artists including jazz musicians
Ornette Coleman and
Anthony Braxton, video photographer
Anthony Ramos, and other painters like
Grégoire Müller,
Frank Bowling and
Daniel LaRue Johnson. In addition to collaborative paintings, Brown contributed to performing arts productions like
Be Aware,
Stolen Moments and
Portrait of a Painter.
Anthony Braxton composed and performed the music and Anthony Ramos created the videos for the latter two projects. Brown's loft at 120 Wooster Street became a gathering place in SoHo during this period. Brown exhibited with Marlborough Fine Art in New York from 1983 through 1990. During this time, he focused much of his work on creating portraits of jazz and blues musicians. This series contains over 350 pieces, including popular artists such as Ornette Coleman, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, and Lionel Hampton in addition to less well-known jazz and blues artists. Brown taught art at the Central College of Fine Arts in
Beijing in 1985 and 1987. In June 1988, Brown had a retrospective exhibition of 100 art works at the
Museum of the Chinese Revolution, becoming one of the earliest Western artists to exhibit in China (
Robert Rauschenberg preceded him with ROCI CHINA at the National Art Museum of China in 1985). Brown created a five-panel painting,
The Life of Christ Altarpiece, for the
Museum of Contemporary Religious Art, St. Louis University, in 1992. The three central panels represent the
Baptism, Descent From the Cross, and
Resurrection of Christ, with two side panels of the
Madonna and Child and the
Descent into Hell. In 1993, Brown completed
The Assumption of Mary at
Xavier University of Louisiana. The painting is three stories tall and is on a single canvas. Crosby Kemper commissioned Brown to do a site specific project for the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, which was under construction. In 1994, Brown's personal interpretation of
The History of Art, a series of 110 paintings chronicling the progression of art through human history was installed in the museum's Café Sebastienne (named after Brown's daughter, Sebastienne). From 2002 to 2003, Brown had a retrospective exhibition titled
Frederick J. Brown: Portraits in Jazz, Blues, and Other Icons. The exhibition traveled from the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art and the American Jazz Museum in Kansas City to the New Orleans Museum of Art and the Studio Museum of Harlem. In September 2008 Brown organized a symposium of artists, musicians, dancers and poets at
Cornell University on the Creative Movement of the 1970s. Speakers included bassist
Charlie Haden, saxophonists
Henry Threadgill,
Sam Rivers and James Jordan, artist
Tony Ramos, poet and activist
Felipe Luciano, songwriter
Malcolm Mooney, writer and music critic
Stanley Crouch, designer Jean Claude Samuel, dancer Megan Bowman-Brown and others. ==Personal life==