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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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Turning Uncle Tom's Cabin upside down, Alison Saar's Topsy and the Golden Fleece
See learning resources here.
Alison Saar, Topsy and the Golden Fleece, 2017, wood, tar, steel, ceiling tin, wire, acrylic paint and gold leaf, 35-1/2 x 11-1/2 x-8 1/2 inches (Toledo Museum of Art, ©Alison Saar) speakers: Dr. Halona Norton-Westbrook, Director of Curatorial Affairs and Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Toledo Museum of Art and Dr. Beth Harris.
Alison Saar, Topsy and the Golden Fleece, 2017, wood, tar, steel, ceiling tin, wire, acrylic paint and gold leaf, 35-1/2 x 11-1/2 x-8 1/2 inches (Toledo Museum of Art, ©Alison Saar) speakers: Dr. Halona Norton-Westbrook, Director of Curatorial Affairs and Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Toledo Museum of Art and Dr. Beth Harris.
Video transcript
(jazz piano music) - [Beth] We're in the galleries
at the Toledo Museum of Art, looking at a sculpture by Alison Saar, called Topsy and the Golden Fleece. - [Halona] Topsy is a figure
from Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. She is traditionally represented as this embodiment of
wickedness, of mischievousness, the opposite to the
golden-haired child, Eva, who is the living embodiment of goodness, purity, and the Christian spirit. - [Beth] Topsy steals, she lies, she's wild, she's everything Eva isn't. - [Halona] In Stowe's novel,
there's a closing section where Eva is dying and takes
a lock of her golden hair and gives it to Topsy with the hope that that will bring
her into civilization, that that will make her
a great Christian child. - [Beth] And it does, Topsy
is reformed in the novel after Eva gives her this golden lock. In the end, what Stowe does is create this stereotype of this young, wild, black girl that persists into the 20th century. - [Halona] It's incredibly complicated because Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel was meant to be in support of abolition, in support of the movement
that ended slavery. - [Beth] And it did help. - [Halona] And therein lies
some of the irony, too, because something can be a
catalyst like that in history; and yet, that doesn't mean
that it's uncomplicated or that it doesn't bear
the mark of its time. And I think that one of
the things that Alison Saar is so interested in is what
is the narrative around Topsy that can be reclaimed,
that can be reimagined? - [Beth] Well, she's turned
the story into a upside down. Instead of being given Eva's golden hair, here we see Topsy with her scythe, and she's clearly used that. We can see the golden
hair in the right hand, but the other side looks like blood. And we have a sense that
Eva's hair has been taken. - [Halona] She's as wild as ever, but she is empowered to take
ownership of her own life. She has agency; whereas in the novel, and then in later depictions of her, she was always a vehicle
for other people's feelings, for other people's projections. - [Beth] She looks angry,
there's a turning of the tables. And in fact, this piece
was in an exhibition called Topsy Turvy, so this idea of shifting the narrative of Topsy becoming a figure
who controls her own destiny. And here, we've got Topsy merged together with an ancient Greek myth,
Jason and the Golden Fleece. - [Halona] So, in Jason
and the Golden Fleece, the golden fleece is meant to represent kingship and authority. And whoever owns it or
holds it holds the power. So, what we have here
is the artist revisiting both of those stories, merging them. And I think that it's very meaningful that Alison Saar has
not entirely abandoned some of the characteristics around Topsy. For instance, she's
described as having hair exactly in the fashion that you see here, in these twisted braids
that project from her head, which Alison Saar says she
thinks of as Medusa-like. - [Beth] Medusa had snakes for hair. And the sight of Medusa
turned men into stone. So, she was a frightening,
powerful figure. And the figure here,
too, although she's just standing in this relaxed position, she is fearsome, she is
frightening, she looks angry. And Saar talks about how this sculpture, this series of work about Topsy, is a reaction to what's going on in the world in the last few years; so the Black Lives Matter movement, we can think about the
way that social media and everyone having a
video camera in their phone has made it possible for us to see images of violence against black
people, against black men, things that had been
happening for centuries, but now exposed, and the kind of anger
that those images arouse. - [Halona] And when you
think about the situation that Topsy has been placed in, what could be more human than
reacting in absolute anger? - [Beth] As I look at this figure, it's hard not to think about images of female nudes in art history. But here, the tables really are turned. The scythe is in front of her
body, it obscures our gaze. And a scythe is a tool that was used by slaves to harvest rice. And that tool is, here,
a tool of empowerment. So, she takes power for herself. She doesn't wait to be given anything. She acquires it for herself. - [Halona] And I think that, with this particular character of Topsy, there is how she was represented
in the initial novel; but then, also, I think we can't underplay the importance of how that character was picked up and adapted
in popular culture, and to the point where she
became an image of ridicule, an image devoid of humanity. - [Beth] When you see
people through the lens of a stereotype, you
don't see their humanity. And I think Saar has brought back Topsy's humanity and her agency. (jazz piano music)