1910–2007
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Crite's formative education in art took place at Boston University, the Massachusetts School of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, and Harvard University School Extension School.

1910–2007

Crite's formative education in art took place at Boston University, the Massachusetts School of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, and Harvard University School Extension School.

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1910–2007
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Crite's formative education in art took place at Boston University, the Massachusetts School of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, and Harvard University School Extension School.

1910–2007

Crite's formative education in art took place at Boston University, the Massachusetts School of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, and Harvard University School Extension School.

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However, he was a non-conventional artist who worked as an illustrator in the Planning Department of the Boston Naval Shipyards, for most of his career.

Crite’s early paintings are reflective of the daily activities of his surroundings in Boston’s African-American community. Some of Crite’s more iconographic works include his 1930s pen and ink drawings, pen-and-brush drawings, and lithographs that centered on religious themes. "Three Spirituals," among Crite’s most iconographic images shows the artist’s technical expertise rendering in with ink. As in Crite’s other religious illustrations, the figures in Three Spiritualism are represented as African Americans, a testament to the artist’s deeply felt racial pride. This sentiment perhaps emanates from the artist’s early career when he exhibited with members of the Harlem Renaissance.

In Crite’s “neighborhood paintings” series, he highlight’s life in the predominantly African American community of Boston (Roxbury district) where he lived. Per the artists’ own words, “My intention in the neighborhood paintings and some drawings was to show aspects of life in the city with special reference to the use of the terminology “Black” people and to present them in an ordinary light, persons enjoying the usual pleasures of life with its mixtures of both sorrow and joys … I was an artist-reporter, recording what I saw.”

The Artist’s Work in Other Collections (selected)
Museum of Modern Art
• Phillips Collection
• Corcoran Gallery
• Smithsonian Institute
• Art Institute of Chicago

Exhibitions (Artist)-selected
Harmon Foundation
• Museum of Modern Art
• Corcoran Gallery of Art
• Boston Museum of Fine Art
• Boston Anthenaeum

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Crite has painted murals and Stations of the Cross in various parishes in several states, and has also designed private devotional works such as the Creed, Stations of the Cross, and parish bulletins that are furnished to churches in the United States and Mexico.
Crite has painted murals and Stations of the Cross in various parishes in several states, and has also designed private devotional works such as the Creed, Stations of the Cross, and parish bulletins that are furnished to churches in the United States and Mexico.
Harlem Renaissance
Harmon Foundation
Works Progress Administration

Crite’s art work has been widely exhibited and well received in Boston, where a square is named after him.

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