Main content
Modernisms 1900-1980
The moment of American Industry: Elsie Driggs, Blast Furnaces, 1927
Elsie Driggs, Blast Furnaces, 1927, oil on canvas, 83.8 x 99.1 cm (Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas, 2017.1), a Seeing America video Speakers: Dr. Jenn Padgett, Associate Curator, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and Dr. Steven Zucker. See learning resources here.. Created by Smarthistory.
Want to join the conversation?
- where i can find the video explaining the process involved in blast furnaces?(1 vote)
- That's an interesting question. If I were you, I'd log out of Khan Academy, then use one of the popular search engines asking for "blast furnace" and then selecting "videos" so the list only shows you those. After that, make your pick.(1 vote)
Video transcript
(jazzy piano music) - [Steven] We're in the
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, looking at
a painting by Elsie Driggs called "Blast Furnaces,"
and it dates to 1927. This is a painting that
was made from sketches made in Pittsburgh, the
heart of American industry, the heart of American steel. This was the moment of American industry. - [Jen] The site is the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company factory,
which the artist first saw when she was a young girl, when she was traveling
by train in Pennsylvania. She recounted that her father
woke her up on this train ride and she looked outside and
saw the Bessemer furnaces and was just completely taken
by this vision of industry. When she visited much later, the plant was no longer
using the Bessemer process, so she went and discovered
a very different scene, and depicted it in this painting. - [Steven] The production of steel couldn't have been more important to the development of the
United States at this moment. The steel that's being produced
in Pittsburgh at this time is being used in the
burgeoning automobile industry, for the bridges that are being built, and for the skyscrapers
that are being erected, especially in Manhattan. - [Jen] Also, railroad tracks
and all of the infrastructure needed for the rail system
would've been formed from the steel made in
plants such as this. - [Steven] But Driggs is not representing a locomotive within a beautiful landscape, or the soaring skyscrapers
of lower Manhattan. Instead, she's representing something that most people wouldn't find beautiful. She's finding beauty in a factory. - [Jen] This choice of subject
became popular in the 1920s, and for Driggs it was about looking at the beauty of these forms,
and connecting it back to the beauty of classical art. - [Steven] And that seems at
first to be a bit of a jump. How can you go from the
steel mills of Pittsburgh to the pristine marbles of
Ancient Greece and Rome? How can we talk about those
two things in one breath? I think, for Driggs, it's not
so much the subject matter as a kind of formal beauty. It has to do with order and symmetry, and emphasis on geometry. - [Jen] The repeated geometries and pattern within the
painting are so crucial. We have those four large
cylindrical forms in the center, but then you have the echoed pairings of these different
smokestacks in the back, from the four darker vertical portions to those three brown smokestacks that are in the far distance, so you get that sense
of an underlying order. - [Steven] But I'm especially fond of the way that she interrupts that order. You have those four massive cylinders that anchor the painting. But then, in front of
that, you have this piping that seems more organic. - [Jen] You also have the scaffolding, which creates this fine, lacy detailing that makes an interesting contrast to the large, flat planes
of those cylinders. - [Steven] And also gives us a sense of the scale of these
monumental structures. I can just imagine that if I was standing on one of those walkways,
the top railing would come just a little higher than my waist. This is a dark painting. Even the sky, which is the brightest part of this painting, is dark. It's grays, yellows, and tans. - [Jen] This seems like a
place that's so out of scale, and so inhospitable to human presence that you wonder what is the relationship between the human and industry that in some ways, these
forms that humans have created have taken on a life of their own that seems to be completely outside of the everyday world of human experience. - [Steven] Well it makes sense to me that there is that kind of ambivalence. Because Pittsburgh had been the site of some of the most violent labor riots in the United States. It was a place that had witnessed terrible industrial accidents
and loss of human life, and so that ambivalence makes sense to me. There's a cost to this industry. - [Jen] Even the viewpoint
slightly distances you from a human experience. The way that she crops the painting on the bottom and at that top gives you the sense that
you're almost floating and disembodied, so in
the viewpoint itself, Driggs is playing with that question, of what is the relationship between human scale and industry? - [Steven] And it's worth noting that only two years after
this painting was completed, Wall Street will crash,
and American industry will grind to a halt. (jazzy piano music)