Universal Negro Improvement Association
The Universal Negro Improvement Association: A Movement Embodied in Visual Form The Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), founded by Marcus Garvey in 1914, is perhaps an unusual subject for a biographical art essay. It wasn’t a single artist but a mass movement—a powerful, pan-African organization that sought to uplift and unite people of African descent globally. However, the UNIA *was* profoundly visual, employing imagery…
The Lifeline
Scroll through Universal Negro Improvement Association's working life — artwork by artwork, chapter by chapter — from the earliest dated work to the last. Each thumbnail is pinned at its exact year on the gold axis.
Chapters — Career Periods
The ribbon is divided into shaded bands, one per career chapter. Each chapter groups Universal Negro Improvement Association's works by their historical period — early training, mature practice, final years.
Thumbnails — Dated Works
Every thumbnail is pinned at its precise creation year. A thin gold thread drops from the image to its exact point on the axis. Larger frames mark the artist's masterpieces by rank.
Colour Band — Movement Drift
The gradient bar beneath the axis shifts colour as the dominant art movement changes over time — from the warm golds of the early period through the deeper tones of maturity. It fills progressively as you scroll.