(1930), featured in the
Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism exhibition at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art Harleston painted in a realist style that was influenced by both his Boston training and his wife Elise Forrest Harleston's photographic work. He mostly painted portraits, often on commission, and his sitters included notables such as
Grace Towns, who later became the first African-American woman elected to the Georgia General Assembly; philanthropist
Pierre S. du Pont; and
Edward Twitchell Ware, a former president of Atlanta University. Harleston struggled to maintain a consistent artistic career while working for his father but returned to art in his thirties after meeting Elise Forrest. When he returned to painting, he was pleased to find his skills from school were still intact and painted his family members. He also painted genre scenes of the daily life of Charleston's African-American citizens, especially its rising middle class, as well as landscapes of
South Carolina Lowcountry. Out of step with the rising modernism of the 1920s, he saw himself as continuing in the tradition of
Henry Ossawa Tanner by portraying Black people and their lives realistically instead of as caricatures or stereotypes. Harleston was described by W. E. B. Du Bois as the "leading portrait painter of the race" even though his responsibility for helping to run the funeral home meant he could never devote himself to being an artist full-time. In 1920, Harleston married photographer
Elise Forrest, with whom he opened a studio across the street from the funeral home. This studio, which had both workspace and a public gallery to promote their artwork, was the first such public art establishment for Charleston's African-American citizens. Harleston often used Elise's photographs as the basis of his paintings and drawings; one of his best-known works,
Miss Sue Bailey with the African Shawl, is based on a photograph by Elise. A three-quarter length seated portrait in dark colors and muted light, the painting exemplifies Harleston's commitment to portraying his sitters with dignity. Edwin was actually so pleased with the painting that he entered it in the 1930 Harmon Foundation Awards competition. In the summer of 1930, Harleston traveled to Nashville, Tennessee to help artist
Aaron Douglas paint his
Symbolic Negro History murals for
Fisk University; these are now considered among Douglas's most important works. This project was completed in October 1930, seven months before Harleston died. While at Fisk, Harleston painted Douglas's portrait with the unfinished mural in the background, typically emphasizing the sitter's profession and character while avoiding any suggestion of the picturesque. This mural is vastly different from his usual painting style, which consisted of muted colors like those seen in the painting o
f Miss Sue Bailey with the African Shawl. The colors he used in the mural showcase a much more vibrant range of shade, which display his range as an artist and the way he could adjust to work with other artists. Harleston won a number of awards for his work, including the top prize in NAACP-sponsored contests in 1925 (
A Colored Grand Army Man) and 1931 (
Ouida) and the
William E. Harmon Foundation's Alain Locke Prize for portrait painting, also in 1931 (
The Old Servant). Despite this modest success, Harleston was largely excluded from the dominantly white artistic circles of the
Charleston Renaissance with which his work is today associated. Only writer
Julia Peterkin, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her writing about African-American life, appears to have visited Harleston. Although writer
DuBose Heyward based a character on him in his novel ''Mamba's Daughters'', it seems they never met in person. Racial prejudice and segregation thwarted several potential commissions and blocked a planned 1926 exhibition of his work at the Charleston Museum that had been organized by museum director
Laura Bragg and promoted by the city's mayor,
Thomas Porcher Stoney. By 1930, commissions were drying up and the funeral home business was suffering due to the
Great Depression. Harleston undertook a series of lecture/demonstrations at Black colleges to earn money. On April 21, 1931, Harleston's father died of pneumonia, and Harleston himself (who is said to have kissed his dying father on the lips) succumbed to the same ailment nineteen days later at the age of 49. ==Legacy==