Title: Visual Symbols of Power, Oppression, and Protest
1Visual Symbols of Power, Oppression, and Protest
2Since the earliest times, man has created visual
symbols to gain or express power over his
environment.
3Whether in life or death, the Egyptian Pharaohs
displayed their symbols of power.
4Symbols of power among many cultures, like the
Maya, were affected by geographical influences
such as plant and animal life and mineral wealth.
5The Aztec culture had many similar customs and
symbols of power.
6The Chinese Emperors had many symbols of their
powerclothing design and color, furniture,
armor, weapons, seals, knowledge and skills.
7Likewise, members of the English monarchy, such
as Henry VIII, displayed the clothing, scepters,
and other items that signified their power and
position.
8Horses were a common symbol of power in European
portraits.
9Even our American Presidents had flags, weapons,
and seals to represent their power.
10A modern CEO has his own symbols of power.
11And no matter what the time or place, the
exercise of power meant that others were subject
to that power, sometimes oppressively.
- Zhao Yannian Nightmare 2 1989, woodcut
- The hand pushing down the head gives this piece a
sense of both the physicality of the act and the
emotional ramifications of the humiliation.
12The Egyptians enslaved conquered people and put
them to work building their monuments.
13The Aztecs and Mayans killed or sacrificed their
enemies.
14Chinese rulers from Ghenghis Khan to PuYi
maintained control of their power and territories
by eliminating the opposition.
15In both England and France invaders and citizens
alike were beheaded for their religious beliefs.
16 American colonists participated in the slave
trade from Africa and engaged in wars with Native
American peoples, forcing them from their lands
and hunting grounds.
17Artists have used their skills to record these
events or raise their own symbols of protest
against these abuses of power.
- Li Hua's Roar, China!, 1935 is poignant in its
emotional directness. Sharp contrasts of black
and white are used to emphasize conflict, and
body movements are portrayed as purposeful and/or
expressive of intense emotions.
18- Zhao Yannian is a major figure in the New Chinese
Woodblock Movement (Creative Print Movement),
founded in 1931 by the social critic, writer, and
intellectual father of the Chinese revolution, Lu
Xun (1881-1936). Inspired by the technique, style
and subject matter of such European artists as
Käthe Kollwitz and Frans Masereel, Zhao and other
artists in the movement carved their own blocks
and used their art to comment on current social
and political events and to influence
revolutionary politics.
19Käthe Kollwitz - Germany, 1867-1945
- Beim Dengeln is a startling image of a peasant
sharpening a scythe, with the clear implication
that the tool could also serve as a weapon. - The image tells a story and presents an image
that has universal recognition and appeal.
20Images can portray both the brutality and the
courage of the event.
21- Diego Rivera creates a contrast with past
cultural convention by showing Mexican
revolutionary leader Emiliana Zapata on a level
with the horse he has seized from its former
owner. - Zapata's quiet assumption of power won him
respect rather than fear.
22- The most effective images are simple, clear, and
contain the most universally recognized symbols. - They work best when they are publicly displayed,
rather than having limited audience exposure.
23Lenin and Stalin, an example of the official art
of socialist realism, 1950s, USSR.
Komar Melamid, Double Self Portrait as Lenin
Stalin, 1972. From Sots Art series. First
Version. Destroyed in the Bulldozer Exhibition
along with other Sots Art works.
- An artist may rely on the shock value of using
satirical versions of familiar or official
cultural images in forbidden ways in their
protest art.
24British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, along
with U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and Soviet
Leader Joseph Stalin, attend the conference at
Yalta. February 1945. (Photo credit U.S.
National Archives)
Komar Melamid, Yalta Conference, 1982, tempera
and oil on canvas, 72X48.
25Some artists may develop personal images that
relate to the expression of their ideas.
- Hong Zhang created a series of pictures on the
gender revolution in China. - The first picture in the series represents the
women of Hongs grandmothers generation. - The cage represents the patriarchal society that
kept women bound to the private space within the
home. Grandmother also had bound feet, the
practice that crushed the bones and deformed the
feet of young girls so they can have the outward
appearance of tiny delicate feet. The goal was to
have a "Three Inch Golden Lotus" (sancun
jinlian), but the actual result was unbelievable
pain that lasted a lifetime. In this picture,
grandmother is sewing a normal size pair of
cotton shoes because her daughter was the first
woman in her family to break the cycle of bound
feet. The character on the dish is food.
26- Hongs second image represents her mothers
generation. - Unlike my grandmother, the cage door is open.
Mother had more freedom as a women in the
Communist Chinese society. Her feet were not
bound and she had a number of career
opportunities. Still, my mother did not have the
freedom to say or do what she wanted. Her cage
was the restrictions of the day and Maoist
Thought, especially during the Cultural
Revolution (1966-1976). The Chinese character on
the cup is (weibing or hongweibing) the Red
Guard.
27- The final image in the series represents the
artists generation. - Compared to my grandmother and my mother's
generations, Chinese society has progressed and
the situation for young urban women in China has
improved. The cage is open and I can sit on the
outside. The Chinese character on the cup is fu
meaning good fortune. Also notice that the feet
are uncovered and slightly exaggerated (larger
than normal). - These images would be easily recognized inside
China, but might not be as meaningful elsewhere
where the viewer lacked the cultural background
to interpret the iconography.
28In America, we have our own highly recognized
images of the changing image of women in society.
- Norman Rockwell's iconic image of "Rosie the
Riveter" was modeled on Michelangelo's
Isaiah.Appearing for the first time on the
cover of the Saturday Evening Post in 1943, Rosie
came to represent the growth in the power of
American women brought about by war.This
adaptation of Rosie for an American War Poster is
typical of the theme symbolizing, as it does,
the sense of empowerment, freedom, emancipation
and commitment.
29Artists have used their skills to bring our
attention to the social issues of their day.
- Norman Rockwell gave us numerous poignant images
of the fight against racial discrimination.
30Stereotypical images of the Negro Mammy were
replaced by images that showed quiet dignity and
eventually blatant militancy.
31Artists used classical art images as the model
for new art styles and the changing views of the
ideal of beauty.
32Art can be a powerful instrument for change.
- In speaking of most of the WPA sponsored art,
Thomas Craven said, They are using art as the
tool for propagation of economic notions which,
though distributed geographically, are far from
universal in their application. No art can be
enslaved to doctrine. Art in its proper
manifestations, is a communicative instrument
but it communicates its own findingsnot what is
doled out to it, not what an economic theory
imposes upon it, but its discoveries in any
department of life.
33- Diego Rivera, along with his compatriots David
Alfaro Siquieros and José Clemente Orozco, broke
the dependent links to European culture, helping
to create authentic visual aesthetics for Mexico,
with an emphasis on indigenism (or indianism),
folk characters, historic epics, solidarity with
the dispossessed, dramatization of class
conflicts, mockery of the egotism and hypocrisy
of those in power, and a celebration of the
traditional rites and myths. These artists
expressed the idealistic belief in the
possibility of cultural change and the social
responsibility of the artist.
34Many artists would no doubt agree with Charles
Wilbur Whites statement,Paint is the only
weapon I have with which to fight what I resent.