Articulating a Turbulent Era
By Tom Wachunas
“…I have come to
something that is in the image of America and the American people of my time.” –artist
Thomas Hart Benton-
“I am primarily
concerned with the condition of Man.” –Jack Levine, American Social Realist
painter and printmaker (1915-2010)
EXHIBITION: Labor and New Deal Art, at the Massillon
Museum THROUGH JUNE 2, 121 Lincoln Way East, downtown Massillon www.massillonmuseum.org
Here’s a hearty
Thank You to the students at Youngstown State University who created this
wholly impressive travelling print exhibit. I include here a paragraph from the
Massillon Museum web page about the show:
“The exhibition is held in commemoration of
last year's 75th anniversary of the Little Steel Strike of 1937—the epic labor
struggle that stretched across the Great Lakes industrial corridor from
Northeast Ohio to South Chicago.
Detailing the history of this turbulent event is a banner exhibit
created by students at Youngstown State University.” Click on this link for the
entire background statement - http://www.massillonmuseum.org/116
More than a commemoration of a singularly
important event, however, this gathering of 55 largely black-and-white prints
(including etchings, wood engravings and lithographs) is a collectively powerful
vision of Depression-era ethos from artists who experienced it directly. And on a strictly formal level, most of these
multi-styled representational renderings (nothing here in the way of
non-objective abstraction) are masterfully composed as well as technically
stunning.
Particularly
compelling here is the range of narratives - the thematic/ideological content.
Yes, these mixed images of grand industrial development and blighted rural life
are inextricably entwined with often tragic dramas of economic, political and
social turmoil that defined a specific chapter in American history. But the
overarching emotional impact of this art – its searing vocabulary of societal
angst - is a haunting one. It’s a resonance still evident today in the volatile
state of affairs not just in America, but globally.
“The New Deal arts
programs were intended to expand and strengthen cultural democracy,” we read in
the exhibit statement. “Cultural democracy” is an ambiguous enough phrase to
make me consider that we do indeed live, now more than ever, in a troubled democracy
of cultural dichotomies: poverty and plenty, depravity and dignity, greed and
grace, confrontation and celebration.
Art of the New
Deal? Call it “old fashioned” art that’s taken on a sobering if not sad new
relevance.
Photos (from top) –
Breadline, New York, wood engraving
by Claire Lieghton; Laborers with Derrick
and Structural Steel, lithograph by Russell T. Limbach; Give Us This Day, lithograph by John De Martelly; The Strike, lithograph by Thomas Hart
Benton
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