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Modernisms 1900-1980
Course: Modernisms 1900-1980 > Unit 8
Lesson 9: Social Realism- Raphael Soyer, Dancing Lesson
- Strange Worlds, immigration in the early 20th century
- Hale Woodruff, The Banjo Player
- Grant Wood, American Gothic
- Alexandre Hogue, Crucified Land
- Revisiting the myth of George Washington and the cherry tree
- Vertis Hayes, The Lynchers
- Vertis Hayes, Juke Joint
- Cheap Thrills: Coney Island during the Great Depression
- Ben Shahn, Contemporary American Sculpture
- A mine disaster and those left behind: Ben Shahn's Miner's Wives
- Ben Shahn, The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti
- Romare Bearden, Factory Workers
- Hopper, Nighthawks
- Hopper, Nighthawks
- Horace Pippin's Mr. Prejudice
- Josiah McElheny on Horace Pippin
- Norman Rockwell, Rosie the Riveter
- Eldzier Cortor, Southern Landscape
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Alexandre Hogue, Crucified Land
Alexandre Hogue's "Crucified Land" captures the Dust Bowl's devastation. The painting's cross-shaped fence symbolizes environmental concern. This artwork offers a poignant critique of harmful farming practices and their impact on the landscape. What part of the painting caught your eye? Created by Smarthistory.
Want to join the conversation?
- why is there a scarecrow in the middle of nowhere(2 votes)
- 1) This is an artist's product. It is not a photograph.
2) The land around the scarecrow is a cultivated field, and the farmstead is in the background. This is not nowhere.
3) The artist uses the motif of a crucifixion, from the heart of Christianity, to make a statement about what is happening to the land.
I believe this is a well executed piece of political art, designed to convey a message about the land and its exploitation in contemporary times.(3 votes)
Video transcript
(light piano music) - [Steven] We're in the Gilcrease museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma, looking at a large, expansive landscape of the American West, specifically of Denton, Texas. - [Laura] This is "Crucified Land" by Alexandre Hogue in 1939. You can see a wheat field
that has been plowed in vertical rows across the canvas, but water erosion has carved
these gashes through the land. It's almost as though the
land has been cut open and revealed this red
earth underneath the crops. You get this great contrast between the green of the
wheat crop and the red of the eroded soil. - [Steven] And that vivid contrast, these brilliant colors in the foreground that are so starkly at
odds with each other change as your eye moves towards
this high horizon, where we see those greens
and reds merge into blues and lavenders and purples, and we see an approaching storm there as the silhouette of a tractor. And just peaking from
behind the horizon line, we see the roof of a house. - [Laura] But perhaps
the most prominent detail of this painting is the scarecrow. In the upper left corner, you see a scarecrow that is
depicted like a crucifix. And this is even swaying to the side, almost as though the little bit of field that it's resting on is about to give way as the erosion continues. - [Steven] The broad expanse
of millions and millions of acres of grasslands
in the American West had been disrupted in
the early 20th century by farming and ultimately by the plow. And it caused irreparable damage. - [Laura] This painting was created as part of the "Erosion
Series" that Hogue worked on through the 1930s that
were referencing some of the ways that destructive and reckless agriculture
practices were harming lands in Texas and Oklahoma and across
the southern Great Plains. In this particular painting
showing water erosion, Hogue is very clearly placing the blame on that skeletal tractor
in the background. It's the use of industrial equipment. It's the disregard for
the contours of the land and for the needs of the land that is causing this destruction. - [Steven] You have a sense
that before the tractor, this land had been an
uninterrupted expanse of green, and it's almost as if the earth below has been bloodied, has been opened. It is a wound, a kind of gash
in the surface of the earth. - [Laura] And to really make the point that he sees this as a sin against nature, Hogue has added numerous
Biblical references throughout this painting. Most obvious is this
scarecrow crucifix shape, which is comparing the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ to this human-caused
devastation to the land. Art historian Mark White has noted that the water flowing
away from this eroded field is almost snakelike,
as a possible reference to the Biblical serpent. - [Steven] This was painted in 1939, at the end of the tragic
period in the Midwest which we know as the Dust Bowl, when the very fragile
topsoil of the prairie had been disrupted, and
after just a few seasons, had become dust, dust that was sometimes
blown up by the prairie winds into enormous walls that covered towns, that buried houses, and that displaced so many farm workers. - [Laura] The tractor in the
background of this painting is telling us a couple of things. One, that the tractor itself
caused the destruction of this prairie topsoil, but tractors also reduced
the need for farm labors, and the migration from places
like Texas and Oklahoma to California and the
loss of jobs was more due to tractors replacing farm
workers than to the destruction of the Dust Bowl itself. - [Steven] This is erosion that is caused by man's impact but is
actually effectuated by rains, by water. We often think of Oklahoma as a dry state, but it's really the water
that is doing the damage here. - [Laura] And in the top
left corner of this painting, you can see the next storm approaching, letting viewers know that there's even more
destruction to come. - [Steven] How do you take a contemporary ecological disaster and make it into a work of art? What are the historical
sources that you draw on? Hogue is using the tradition
of Biblical reference in order to draw attention
and draw sympathy for and draw potentially political action towards saving this landscape. He had grown up in Texas on
his sister's enormous sheep and cattle ranch and had developed a real sensitivity, a real
awareness of the beauty of that land and had
watched it be destroyed. He was very much an artist activist. - [Laura] "Life Magazine"
in 1937 described this painting series as a, "Scathing denunciation of
man's persistent mistakes." - [Steven] And I think
that Hogue was successful. When I look at this painting, I see an image that is
incredibly beautiful and visually compelling, but it is also telling this tragic story and telling a story that we
can take action to prevent. - [Laura] During his lifetime, and at the time these were painted, some of Hogue's "Erosion Series" paintings were causing calls to action
or at least disruption. The alarm that these politicians felt on seeing this image
indicates how powerful these images were and
how they could function to change people's opinion
about these farming practices and this reckless, rampant capitalism destroying the environment. - [Steven] Issues that
we're still facing today. (light piano music)