COLLECTION NAME:
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
mediaCollectionId
ArtArtHiAAH~7~7
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
Collection
true
Image Record ID:
aahi0001866
image_record_id
aahi0001866
Image Record ID
false
Work Title (display):
Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco
Image Title:
full view
Work Dates (display):
1931 - 1932
Work Dates type:
creation
Work Creator (display):
Ben Shahn (American, 1898-1969)
Work Creator gender:
male
work_creator_or_agent_gender
male
Work Creator gender
false
Work Creator notes (display):
American painter, photographer and lithographer of Lithuanian birth. He was born into a family of Jewish craftsmen who emigrated in 1906, settling in New York. From 1913 to 1917 Shahn served as an apprentice in Hessenberg's Lithography Shop in Manhattan, and in the evenings he attended high school in Brooklyn. In 1916 he enrolled in a life-drawing class at the Art Students League. After studying biology, first at New York University (1919) and then at City College, New York (191922), he entered the National Academy of Design to pursue a career as an artist (1923). After marrying in 1922, Shahn travelled with his wife to North Africa, Spain, Italy and France (19245; 19279), where he studied both the art of the past and also the works of Matisse, Dufy, Rouault, Picasso and Klee. On his return from Europe in 1925 they moved to Brooklyn Heights. There he met Walker Evans, with whom he began to share a studio. Also in 1925 he began to spend summers in the art colony of Truro, near Provincetown, MA, painting beach scenes and landscapes. He was dissatisfied with his paintings of this period, so much so that he declined an invitation to exhibit at the Montross Gallery in 1926, feeling that his work was still too derivative of the European painters that he had studied (e.g. Little Church, c. 1925; Newark, NJ, Mus.). Shahn's first one-man exhibition was held in 1930 at the Downtown Gallery, New York, and consisted of paintings made on the island of Djerba, off Tunisia. After returning from North Africa in 1929, he became convinced that he wanted his art to refer to contemporary life. In Paris he had bought a small book on the Dreyfus case, and his interest in the trials led to 13 watercolours on the Dreyfus theme, including Captain Dreyfus (1930; Princeton, NJ, Dorothea Greenbaum priv. col., see Shahn, 1972, p. 122). Shahn became known as a social realist in 1932 following the exhibition of a series of 23 gouache paintings entitled the Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti (e.g. Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco, New York, MOMA). They are characterized by strong linearity and use distortion as an expressive conveyer of emotion. In the theme of the trials and execution of immigrant anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti, which became a cause célèbre of intellectuals in the 1920s, Shahn felt he had discovered a contemporary subject analogous to the crucifixion of Christ. In 1933 Shahn painted a similar series about the trials in 1916 of San Francisco labour leader, Tom Mooney, and in 1933 he assisted Diego Rivera on the frescoes for the Rockefeller Center in New York, but they were removed when they were discovered to contain a portrait of Lenin. During the 1930s and 1940s Shahn painted murals for the Works Progress Administration's Federal Art Project (WPA/FAP) and was also employed by the Farm Security Administration (FSA.; 19358) to document the plight of American agricultural workers (e.g. Cotton Pickers, Pulaski County, Arkansas, 1935; see Pratt, p. 39). Many of Shahn's lithographs were linked to his photographs and his experience with the FSA, such as Years of Dust (1936; see Prescott, 1982, pl. x). His later work shows an increased interest in Hebraic subjects, for example Identity (mixed media on paper, 1968; Madrid, Mus. Thyssen-Bornemisza; see Jewish art, fig. 22). In 1956 Shahn held the Charles Norton Chair of Poetics at Harvard University and his lectures summarizing his artistic philosophy of realism were published as The Shape of Content (Cambridge, MA, 1957). (Grove Art Online Accesssed 2007-10-22)
Work Style Period:
20th century
work_styleperiod
20th century
Work Style Period
false
Work Style Period:
social realism
work_styleperiod
social realism
Work Style Period
false
Work Subject:
anarchism
subject
anarchism
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
Sacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921
subject
Sacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
Vanzetti, Bartolemeo (1888-1927)
subject
Vanzetti, Bartolemeo (1888-1927)
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
Sacco, Nicola (1891-1927)
subject
Sacco, Nicola (1891-1927)
Work Subject
false
Work Worktype:
paintings (visual works)
work_type
paintings (visual works)
Work Worktype
false
Work Category (VRC classification):
paintings
work_category__ucbaahvrc_classification_
paintings
Work Category (VRC classification)
false
Work Material and Technique (display):
tempera on paper over composition board
Work Measurements (display):
27 cm (H) x 37 cm (W)
Work Location (Repository or Site) name:
Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.)
Work Location (Repository or Site) role:
repository
Work Location (Repository or Site) refid:
144.1935
Work Location (Repository or Site) refid type:
accession
Work Location (Geographic) name:
New York, New York
Image Rights (display):
© Museum of Modern Art, New York. Licensed for educational use via Scholars Resource: Davis Art Images
Work Rights (display):
unknown
Terms of Agreement and Conditions of Use:
YOU AGREE: Luna Imaging's Insight Software and the digital image collection associated with it (the Software) are being provided by the University of Colorado under the following license. By obtaining, using, and/or copying this work, you (the Licensee) agree that you have read, understood, and will comply with the following terms and conditions. 1. The Software contains the University of Colorado's Department of Art and Art History's implementation of a digital image collection; 2. Any images obtained through use of the Software will be used only for non-profit, educational purposes; 3. The use of images obtained through the software will only be used while the Licensee is either: a) an employee of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver, or the Community College of Denver, or b) an enrolled student at the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver, or the Community College of Denver; 4. When the Licensee is no longer an employee or student of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver or Community College of Denver, either by an action of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver or the Community College of Denver or due to actions of the Licensee, the licensee will cease to use any images exported from the Department of Art and Art History's digital image collection; 5. The Licensee agrees to indemnify the University for claims and liability arising out of the use of the Software or for any violations of this license; 6. THE UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO SUPPLIES THE SOFTWARE WITHOUT ANY WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
CU Copyright Statement:
The contents of the University of Colorado Digital Library are available for your use in research, teaching, and private study. Some of these items are protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) and some items may have additional restrictions. If you use the items in this collection, make sure you abide by any restrictions stated in the descriptive data window. The nature of these collections often makes it difficult to determine the copyright status of an item. We have made every effort to provide information about copyright owners and other restrictions in the descriptive data window. Ultimately, however, it is your responsibility to use the item according to the terms governing its use. If you are a copyright holder and the information is either not listed or listed incorrectly, please let us know so that we can update the information on our site.
Holding Institution:
University of Colorado at Boulder
Collection:
Art and Art History Visual Resources Collection
Collection info and contact:
For information about this collection, see . For specific questions, suggestions, or corrections about the descriptive data for images, contact aahvrc@colorado.edu. Please include the Image Record ID ('aahi' followed by a 7-digit number) for each image in question.