About this artwork
In this work, Ben Shahn blended fact and fiction to offer a pointed commentary on the inclusions and exclusions of the art world. This enigmatic composition features eight known sculptures by leading artists of the day that were all displayed at a 1940 exhibition at the Whitney Museum. Three large, unframed painted images on the back walls of the gallery appear to be part of the show, but they were not actual paintings. Instead, they derive from Shahn’s photographs of working-class people around the United States, which he had taken while employed by the federal government as part of the New Deal, an economic program intended to revitalize the economy during the Great Depression. The invented works serve as portals to different worlds. The figures portrayed in them are positioned to see into the gallery but they are excluded from the “real” space of the museum and the modern art on view because of race, class, and geography.
-
Status
- On View, Gallery 262
-
Department
- Arts of the Americas
-
Artist
- Ben Shahn
-
Title
- Contemporary American Sculpture
-
Place
- United States (Artist's nationality:)
-
Date
- 1940
-
Medium
- Tempera on paper mounted to hardboard
-
Inscriptions
- Signed and inscribed recto, bottom-right corner, in black pigment: Ben Shahn ‘40
-
Dimensions
- 53.2 × 76.5 cm (21 × 30 1/8 in.)
-
Credit Line
- Arts of the Americas Discretionary Fund; Wesley M. Dixon Jr., Roger and J. Peter McCormick, Goodman, and Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Wacker Jr. endowment funds; through prior gift of Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Ryerson; Ada Turnbull Hertle, Stan and Polly Stone, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Puth, and Jay W. McGreevy endowment funds; Luella Thomas Fund; Delphine G. Schoen Trust and Dr. Julian Archie endowment funds
-
Reference Number
- 2023.1