Carl Van Vechten

Carl Van Vechten
Carl Van Vechten was an American writer, photographer, and cultural critic, best known for his involvement in the Harlem Renaissance during the 1920s. He wrote several novels, including "Nigger Heaven" (1926), which depicted the vibrant African American culture of Harlem and sparked controversy due to its provocative title and content. Van Vechten was also an influential patron of African American artists, helping to promote the work of writers like Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston. Later in his career, he shifted his focus to photography, capturing portraits of prominent figures in the arts and entertainment world.

Author's Books:


In Defence of Bad Taste In America, where men are supposed to know nothing about matters of taste and where women have their dresses planned for them, the household decorator has become an important factor in domestic life. Out of an even hundred rich men how many can say that they have had anything to do with the selection or arrangement of the furnishings for their homes? In theatre programs these... more...

THE career of Olive Fremstad has entailed continuous struggle: a struggle in the beginning with poverty, a struggle with a refractory voice, and a struggle with her own overpowering and dominating temperament. Ambition has steered her course. After she had made a notable name for herself through her interpretations of contralto rĂ´les, she determined to sing soprano parts, and did so, largely by an... more...