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Lesson 3: Go deeper: oppression and resistance- The triangle trade and the colonial table, sugar, tea, and slavery
- An African muslim among the founding fathers, Charles Willson Peale’s Yarrow Mamout
- Before the Civil War, the Mexican-American War as prelude
- Seneca Village: the lost history of African Americans in New York
- Cultures and slavery in the American south: a Face Jug from Edgefield county
- Johnson, A Ride for Liberty -- The Fugitive Slaves
- Cotton, oil, and the economics of history
- Representing freedom during the Civil War
- Carving out a life after slavery
- Martyr or murderer? Hovenden's The Last Moments of John Brown
- An artifact of racism: a Connecticut Klan robe
- A beacon of hope, Aaron Douglas's Aspiration
- Jacob Lawrence, The Migration Series (*long version*)
- Romare Bearden, Factory Workers
- Horace Pippin's Mr. Prejudice
- Harlem 1948, Ralph Ellison, Gordon Parks and the photo essay
- A Harlem street scene by Jacob Lawrence, Ambulance Call
- Identity and civil rights in 1960s America
- An unflinching memorial to civil rights martyrs, Thornton Dial's Blood and Meat
- History and deception: Kenseth Armstead’s Surrender Yorktown 1781
- Reflecting on "We the People"
- Titus Kaphar, The Cost of Removal
- Turning Uncle Tom's Cabin upside down, Alison Saar's Topsy and the Golden Fleece
- Kehinde Wiley, Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps
- The National Memorial for Peace and Justice
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Titus Kaphar, The Cost of Removal
Kaphar takes a violent history and renders it visible in this modified portrait of Andrew Jackson. See learning resources here.
Titus Kaphar, The Cost of Removal, 2017, oil, canvas, and rusted nails on canvas, 274.3 x 213.4 x 3.8 cm, © Titus Kaphar (Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art) Speakers: Lauren Haynes, Curator, Contemporary Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and Beth Harris A Seeing America video.
Titus Kaphar, The Cost of Removal, 2017, oil, canvas, and rusted nails on canvas, 274.3 x 213.4 x 3.8 cm, © Titus Kaphar (Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art) Speakers: Lauren Haynes, Curator, Contemporary Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and Beth Harris A Seeing America video.
Want to join the conversation?
- That is a powerful painting.(1 vote)
- Would it be possible to show the painting in profile?(1 vote)
Video transcript
(piano music) - [Lauren] We're in the galleries at the Crystal Bridges
Museum of American Art looking at a painting
by Titus Kaphar called "The Cost of Removal." We're seeing a copy that the artist made of a painting of the American
president, Andrew Jackson, but one that the artist has manipulated. Part of Titus Kaphar's
practice is looking to art works that have existed through time, but then what he does is put
his own ideas into the work. - [Beth] One gets the sense
that he's interested in exposing the kinds of assumptions
that are in art history. - [Lauren] Like so many
artists, he loves art history but is interested in making us think more critically and to think about what are the things that we're not seeing, and what he thinks about is how he can use his work
to expose those ideas. - [Beth] So here we have this heroic image of Andrew Jackson, it's
way over life-size, it comes from this tradition of showing leaders on
horseback in a landscape. - [Lauren] The president
is sitting calmly, very authoritatively. - [Beth] So you have
this idea of being calm on this passionate animal that is in a very long tradition of art history. Titus has rendered, beautifully, this old master style of painting of this beautifully foreshortened horse, this landscape, and then
covered much of the figure in a way that seems violent. There's a real dissonance
here between the paint and then the nails and
these strips of cloth. It feels shocking when
we first look at it. - [Lauren] Titus often
rips into the canvas, cuts into the canvas,
paints over parts of it, and in this particular painting, he has nailed strips of torn canvas that have text on them
into Jackson's figure. - [Beth] It's covering his mouth. It's made him voiceless, and
when I look at the Ralph Earl, I get a real sense of a figure
who has a heroic nobility, and by covering up part of that face, he's robbed him of that noble profile. - [Lauren] He's asking
us to think beyond that and to look more at Jackson's
own words or his own actions. Are these writings on the torn pieces of canvas speaking for him? - [Beth] It's difficult to read the text that's on this canvas,
but we know that the title of the painting is "The Cost of Removal," so this is about the
removal of Native Americans from their land in the South,
east of the Mississippi, to Indian Territory, and this is forcible, coerced, violent removal of native people to Indian territory. - [Lauren] And this was an
act that Jackson signed, so he was the president
that put this into play, what we call now The Trail of Tears. So he was responsible,
ultimately, for this happening. - [Beth] And we're talking about a policy that is blatantly racist, that understood Native
Americans as savages that needed to be removed from the land so that white settlers could farm, and by the 1840s, tens of thousands of Native Americans had been removed, so the scale of this is enormous. What are we to make of the nails? Of the strips of canvas with Jackson's handwriting on them that
are kind of legible. In one place, I saw a number
that seemed to refer to a cost of removing people from the land. But the nails into Jackson, it almost feels as though
Kaphar is punishing Jackson for these acts. - [Lauren] And the nails also reference African fetish objects, so this idea that people would put nails
into particular objects, and the amount of nails
reference how important the object was or how many people put their trust and faith in that. And I think a lot about this idea of how much faith and
trust the American people put into their president. - [Beth] The power of the presidency and the impact that he can have on individual lives and families. So the artist is immediately asking us to consider Jackson in a different way. And not only Jackson in this painting, but I think all images that we see of American heroes, of American presidents. What are the other stories
that we're not being told? The artist said, "I feel
very strongly that most of "the history we have been
taught is at best incomplete, "and at worst fiction. "The more I read history, I
realize that all depictions are, "to some degree, fiction. "We lose something in the interpretation, "and as I realized that
painters throughout history "have embraced this idea of fiction, "I have felt complete freedom to address "these paintings in a way
that made sense to me." That reminds me that we have a tendency to believe what we see,
especially when we're in a museum, which has a sense of authority, but in fact, we know
that not only paintings, but museums, too, have had a role in the kind of terrible oppression that Jackson, himself, was part of. - [Lauren] Everyone is making a choice to tell a particular story, and so often, there are whole groups of people, events, that get left out. Who gets to have their portrait painted? Who gets to have their
portrait painted that then goes into a museum collection that then lasts for hundreds of years? So it's asking us to
think about who we see, but to never forget who we don't see. (piano music)