After Jackson's move to Washington, "she had expected to continue her studies at the art school connected with the
Corcoran Art Gallery but was refused admission because of her color," a rejection that, for a time, discouraged her from pursuing public work in her field. She would later maintain that "It was chiefly through Dr. Du Bois's influence and urging that she again took up her work with the determination to make the most of her gifts for the encouragement it would be to her people." Du Bois not only personally encouraged her, but used her images to illustrate
The Crisis, his newly established journal and, from 1910, the official magazine of the NAACP. With this support, Jackson became "the first to break away from academic cosmopolitanism to frank and deliberate racialism" in her artwork. This determination is evident from her best known surviving pieces: the dignified portrait busts she created of the period's black leaders "decent portraits of decent men", and her intimate family groupings of mothers—mixed race themselves—caressing children—their own children—of mixed racial heritage. For the next two decades, these works would be the headliners of her exhibited work. Jackson arranged for Dr. Du Bois to sit for her in 1907. Although the in-person sessions were discontinued before her portrait bust was finished, Du Bois arranged for photographs to be sent from New York so she could bring the piece to successful completion. Last, and perhaps most helpfully, Du Bois published news of her exhibitions and work in the pages of
The Crisis, through to 1931 and the artist's early death.
Public exhibitions Washington gallery scene In 1912, her portrait bust of Du Bois, among other works, was exhibited at the Veerhoff Gallery in Washington. She received a positive review from
The Washington Star commending the work's structure: "the expression is vital and good, the turn of surface, the intimation of mobility are well rendered." The
Star, reviewing her bust of
Assistant Attorney General WIlliam H. Lewis, later that same fall, took the compliment further, "A portrait to deserve the name must be more than a likeness; it must interpret character; it must have personality. Of this bust as much can truly be said." Exhibiting a broader collection of sculptures at the Veerhoff in 1916, her
Star review was again effusive: Jackson's "work has always shown promise, but these pieces now on exhibit indicate exceptional gift, for they are not merely well modeled, but individual and significant". and Salt Lake City. "What is said to be the first recognition of colored talent by that institution is the exhibition in Corcoran Art Gallery, at Washington, D.C. of a child's head modeled by Mrs. May Howard Jackson." And then—the National Academy of Design, New York (1919))
Segregated exhibitions Artists like Jackson responded to the lack of gallery support by pressing alternative public spaces into service, such as the "War Service and Recreation Center" of the Washington Y.M.C.A., where, in May 1919, a solo "exhibition of 25 sculptures of May Howard Johnson" was held. The M Street High School moved to new buildings and was renamed
Dunbar School in 1916 for the noted African-American intellectual and poet,
Paul Laurence Dunbar (d. 1906) (Jackson would complete a portrait in his honor, a casting of which, in bronze, would become the property of the school). The school's expansion brought new ambitions. Dunbar formed the Tanner Art League in 1919, and an attempt was made to institute an annual show for colored artists. The first show displayed the work of artists from fifteen states and included pieces from
Laura Wheeler,
Julian Abele, Meta Warrick Fuller, and recent work from Jackson ("a bust and statuette").
Teaching In Washington, Jackson maintained a sculpture studio in her home. Aside from portrait sculpting, she continued to teach, with two years at
Howard University as an art instructor for Howard's newly implemented School of art (1922–1924). At the university she taught and influenced James Porter, who went on to write one of the first comprehensive histories of
African-American art.
Recognition With legal
racial segregation in force across the South since the turn of the century, topics such as racial mixing were taboo in general. Laws against
miscegenation had been proposed in both federal and state legislatures as far North as Massachusetts after
Democrat Woodrow Wilson was elected as president in
1912. Her work was recognized with a
Harmon Foundation Award in 1928. Five works were exhibited in the subsequent Harmon show, two featuring as illustration in the exhibition catalogue ("Bust of Dean Kelly Miller" and "Head of a Negro Child").
Leslie King-Hammond, an art historian, later praised Jackson's "efforts to address...without compromise and without sentimentality, the issues of race and class, especially as they affected
mulattos". == Race ==