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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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Vertis Hayes, Juke Joint
Vertis Hayes, Juke Joint, 1946, oil on canvas, 71.1 x 91.4 cm (The Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Collection of African American Art, Georgia Museum of Art), a Seeing America video. Speakers: Dr. Shawnya Harris, the Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Curator of African American and African Diasporic Art at the Georgia Museum of Art and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(light piano music) - [Dr. Zucker] We're in
the Georgia Museum of Art, looking at a large
painting by Vertis Hayes. This is called "Juke Joint," and it was painted in 1946. - [Dr. Harris] Interesting
to see a Southern scene, probably somewhere outside
of Memphis, Tennessee. - [Dr. Zucker] And it's
interesting to look at an easel painting because Vertis Hayes
is probably best known for the murals that he
produced in Memphis, but also that he produced in New York City as part of the WPA, most
famously at Harlem Hospital. So let's start with what a juke joint is. - [Dr. Harris] Essentially,
a juke joint would have been almost like a bar or saloon noted for having great
music and entertainment. It was a central part of many communities, particularly African-American communities. They could have come in any form, a small place in a rural area, in larger cities, they might've taken up a corner of a city block and they became a central meeting place. - [Dr. Zucker] And this does seem like the central meeting
place in this painting, but the building is isolated. - [Dr. Harris] The fact
that it's by itself is really interesting because if you think of the time period, you would have seen
larger cities like Memphis that would have had clusters of buildings, lots of people, lots of cars. And here you have this more isolated scene where the juke joint
is the central building in the composition. - [Dr. Zucker] The building
almost feels alive. It's curving, it seems to
almost be stretching upward. - [Dr. Harris] You can feel the energy of what's going on inside. You can faintly see the colors that seem like they're
bouncing on the window panes, but everything is directed
toward the juke joint. If you look at the electrical
pole across the street leaning in toward the juke joint building. - [Dr. Zucker] And there's a
gentle curve to the roof line of the juke joint, which is echoed in the wires of the pole And even in the clouds. This was a carefully composed image. - [Dr. Harris] There's a
house that's down the road, and there's an outhouse. They all have these curves. Everything is moving. - [Dr. Zucker] And that
kind of organic quality makes this painting feel so human. It makes it feel approachable. And this is a characteristic
of a kind of painting that is known as social realism. - [Dr. Harris] Vertis Hayes was part of a larger community of artists that would have participated in this social realist
vein in American art, showing social scenes of people
active in their communities. Even more mundane scenes, or genre scenes of various communities across the United States,
particularly in the South, where there was a lot of interest in showing rural areas such as this. - [Dr. Zucker] And by genre scenes, we mean scenes of everyday life. Not a historically important event, nobody of particular note, but just the things that
people do every day. And here we see lots of people going about their every day activities. - [Dr. Harris] You see
everything from the people entering and exiting the juke joint, to the tamale seller, the dog that seated on the
border of the composition, the man in the overalls, who's a customer, waiting for his tamale to be prepared. And then even the man in the green suit, who appears to be heading
toward the juke joint. - [Dr. Zucker] And then
further up the hill we see a man in yellow pants standing right in front
of this woman in white. Even further up the hill, we can just make out the
silhouette of yet another figure. - [Dr. Harris] That figure is mirroring the curving electrical pole and the house and the roof
line of the juke joint. - [Dr. Zucker] And then
the man with his foot up on the runner of a police car, talking to two officers. - [Dr. Harris] We're not sure
about what that conversation might be about, if they know each other
or if there's a problem. It's interesting how the police car is functionally oppositionally
to what's going on on the left-hand side. - [Dr. Zucker] The one
form that's as powerful as the building is that road. It's almost a mountain. - [Dr. Harris] You can see that the road is leading toward the viewer. Everything leans downward. You wonder if this will
eventually be paved? - [Dr. Zucker] You can see where the rain has run down that
road, has eroded that soil. And it really expresses for me the economic neglect of a rural area. And it's a period when the United States has just lived through
the Second World War, but it's also a moment
when the Great Depression is still a recent memory. - [Dr. Harris] We're not really sure what time of day it might be. Probably getting close to nighttime because you can see that the
artist emphasizes the bulb. But that purple-ish tint, you wonder if there's a storm
that's about to touch down. - [Dr. Zucker] But also
just that everything in this painting seems to be in flux and to be moving, to be alive. There are no perfect right
angles in that building. Everything in the sky
seems to be changing. And even the road, a
slower kind of change. The change of erosion. One of the things that I
think is really interesting is the attention to signage, to the everyday things
that somebody would see. We see the large beer sign, but then closer to us, we also see what would probably be an enameled sign, advertising beer. We see Moe's Cafe. Perhaps there's a little blue
sign that is alerting people that there's a public telephone here. There's all these wonderful details that capture our attention
and make the scene feel really authentic. (light piano music)