English PA TeachersGuide
English PA TeachersGuide
English PA TeachersGuide
THE
HUMANITIES
ii
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT
FOR THE
HUMANITIES
National Endowment for the Humanities 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20506 www.neh.gov
iii
Bruce Cole
DEPUTY CHAIRMAN AND
DIRECTOR OF WE THE PEOPLE
Thomas Lindsay
PROJECT DIRECTOR
Barbara Bays
PROJECT EDITOR
Carol Peters
DESIGN DIRECTOR
Maria Biernik
WRITERS
David Skinner
N E H A S S I S TA N T E D I T O R O F P U B L I C AT I O N S
Amy Lifson
Printed on Burgo Chorus Art Silk 63 lb. and 130 lb. cover,
a Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified paper made
from 25 percent post-consumer recycled material.
Printed by Schmitz Press
37 Loveton Circle, Sparks, Md 21152
Picturing America is a recognized service mark of the
National Endowment for the Humanities.
Cover: Grant Wood (1892 1942), detail, THE MIDNIGHT RIDE OF
PAUL REVERE, 1931. Oil on Masonite, 30 x 40 in. (76.2 x 101.6 cm.).
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arthur Hoppick Hearn Fund, 1950
(50.117). Photograph Estate of Grant Wood/ Licensed by VAGA,
New York. See Image 3-A.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Picturing America : teachers resource book / [writers, Linda Merrill, Lisa Rogers, Kaye Passmore].
126 p. 340 x 255 cm.
The Teachers Guide was designed to accompany the Picturing America project, a part of We the People, the flagship initiative of the
National Endowment for the Humanities. It is to be distributed free of charge to participating K-12 schools, public libraries, and other entities
chosen by the National Endowment for the HumanitiesT.p. verso.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
1. Art, AmericanStudy and teachingUnited States. 2. Art appreciationStudy and teachingUnited States. I. Merrill, Linda, 1959- II.
Rogers, Lisa. III. Passmore, Kaye. IV. National Endowment for the Humanities.
N353.P52 2008
709.73dc22
2008014414
iv
contents
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xii
vi
1-A
1-B
2-A
2-B
3-A
3-B
4-A
4-B
5-A
5-B
6-A
6-B
7-A
7-B
8-A
8-B
9-A
9-B
10-A
10-B
11-A
11-B
12-A
12-B
13-A
13-B
Louis Comfort Tiffany, Autumn Landscape The River of Life, 1923 1924 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
14-A
14-B
15-A
15-B
16-A
16-B
17-A
17-B
18-A
18-B
19-A
19-B
20-A
20-B
Selected Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 98
Indexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 104
vii
preface
Bruce Cole
Chairman
National Endowment for the Humanities
P R E FA C E
ix
acknowledgments
Picturing America is presented by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH),
in cooperation with the American Library Association.
NEH also wishes to recognize the following organizations and individuals for their support of
the program:
The Institute of Museum and Library Services
The Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Head Start
The National Park Service
The U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs
Picturing America has also been generously supported by Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Smith.
NEH appreciates the support and guidance this program received from the National Trust for the
Humanities, the Presidents Committee for the Arts and Humanities, and the State Humanities Councils.
We are also grateful to the History Channel.
The NEH also thanks the U.S. Department of Education and Crayola LLC for promoting
Picturing America.
xi
introduction
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PICTURING AMERICA
INTRODUCTION
xiii
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PICTURING AMERICA
U S I N G P I C T U R I N G A M E R I C A T O T E A C H C O R E C U R R I C U LU M C L A S S E S
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xvi
PICTURING AMERICA
AMERICAN VALUES
By the end of the Great War (World War I), the United States
had emerged as an international power. However, the stresses
of the Great Depression and the threat of another overseas
conflict dampened the nations underlying optimism and selfconfidence. The artworks that chronicle these dramatic shifts
in the American spirit from Childe Hassams Allies Day, May
1917 and Edward Hoppers House by the Railroad, to Dorothea
Langes Migrant Mother and Norman Rockwells Freedom of
Speech not only represent some of the most intriguing and
thought-provoking images from the first half of the twentieth
century, but offer a host of opportunities for students to explore
the fundamental values that underlie our national character.
Childe Hassams Allies Day, May 1917 (12-B) offers visual proof
of the American spirit immediately following the nations entry
into World War I and is a harbinger of the increasingly crucial
role the United States would come to play in world affairs.
The bold colors of the flags instantly communicate the impor
tance of symbols, and teachers can use the natural curiosity of
young learners to create age-appropriate activities that explore
the role of the flag in America. This might take the form of
civics lessons on the ideals contained in songs such as The
Star Spangled Banner or an examination of another familiar
statement of American values, such as the Pledge of Allegiance.
The images permit middle-school students to trace the spirit
of the American people from the hope of victory in Europe
through the feeling of isolation and hopelessness of the Great
Depression, to the re-emergent faith in and enthusiasm for
American values on the brink of World War II. As students
explore the meaning of Hassams painting, they are offered a
new way to initiate a description and discussion of Americas
self-image when the nation joined forces with its European allies
in World War I. The red, white, and blue flags of the Allies (with
that of America at the top), the overall blue-sky tone of the pic
ture, and the brushstrokes that seem to lie on the surface like a
crust, create a visual unity that communicates the political
solidarity of the countries and can lead to a discussion of the
American political outlook at the time the painting was made.
The mood of Allies Day, May 1917 stands in stark contrast
to that expressed in Edward Hoppers House by the Railroad
(16-A), painted eight years later. Observant students will notice
how the structure of Hoppers picture creates the feeling of
isolation. The house stands alone near a railroad track with no
neighbors (or even trees) close by, and the blank whiteness
of the drawn shades points to a growing sense of dislocation
caused by the transition to modern life. The story continues
with the social upheaval and dislocation caused by the Great
Depression, elegantly expressed in the composition of
Dorothea Langes Migrant Mother (18-B). By emphasizing
U S I N G P I C T U R I N G A M E R I C A T O T E A C H C O R E C U R R I C U LU M C L A S S E S
xvii
xviii
PICTURING AMERICA
CONNECTING CULTURES
U S I N G P I C T U R I N G A M E R I C A T O T E A C H C O R E C U R R I C U LU M C L A S S E S
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PICTURING AMERICA
These are only a few of the ways that the Picturing America
images can help you in the classroom. We hope you enjoy
discovering others.
U S I N G P I C T U R I N G A M E R I C A T O T E A C H C O R E C U R R I C U LU M C L A S S E S
xxi
IMAGE CITATIONS
pg. xv; 3-A Oil on Masonite, 30 x 40 in. (76.2 x 101.6 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1950 (50.117).
Photograph 1988 The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Art Estate of Grant Wood / Licensed by VAGA, New York.
pg. xvi; 2-A Oil on canvas, 3518 x 2812 in. (89.22 x 72.39 cm.). Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of Joseph W. Revere,
William B. Revere, and Edward H. R. Revere, 30.781. Photograph 2008 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
pg. xvii; 12-B Oil on canvas, 3612 x 3014 in. (92.7 x 76.8 cm.). Gift of Ethelyn McKinney in memory of her brother, Glenn Ford McKinney.
Image 2006 Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
pg. xvii; 16-A Oil on canvas, 24 x 29 in. (61 x 73.7 cm.). Given anonymously (3.1930). The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Digital Image The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, New York.
pg. xvii; 18-B Black-and-white photograph. Farm Security Administration, Office of War Information, Photograph Collection.
Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C.
pg. xviii; 19-A Oil on canvas, 4534 x 3512 in. (116.205 x 90.170 cm.). The Norman Rockwell Art Collection Trust, Norman Rockwell Museum,
Stockbridge, Mass. www.nrm.org 1943 SEPS: Licensed by Curtis Publishing, Indianapolis, Ind. All rights reserved. www.curtispublishing.com.
pg. xviii; 13-A Gelatin silver print, 634 x 41316 in. (17.2 x 12.2 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Arnold H. Crane, 1972 (1972.742.3). The
Walker Evans Archive, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
pg. xix; 15-A Oil on canvas, 24 x 31 in. (61 x 78.8 cm.). Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller (166.1934). The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Digital Image The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, New York.
pp. xix; 6-B Oil on card mounted on paperboard, 1812 x 24 in. (47 x 62.3 cm.). Paul Mellon Collection. Image 2006 Board of Trustees,
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
pg. xix; 8-B.1 8-B.2 Pen, ink, and pencil on paper, 912 x 1512 in. each (24.13 x 39.4 cm.). Entire book: 1014 in. x 1612 in. x 134 in. (26.67 x 41.9 x 4.44 cm.);
width with book opened: 3312 in. (85.1 cm.). T614; Thaw Collection, Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, N.Y. Photograph 1998 by John Bigelow Taylor,
New York.
pg. xx; 17-A Casein tempera on hardboard, 18 x 12 in. (45.72 x 30.48 cm.). The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C. Acquired 1942. 2008
The Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
pg. xx; 10-A Bronze, 11 x 14 ft. (3.35 x 4.27 m.). Photograph by Carol M. Highsmith.
pg. xxi; 5-B Oil on canvas, 26 x 3134 in. (66 x 80.6 cm.). Collection of the Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, Pa., Anonymous gift, 1981.
Reprinted with the permission of Atheneum Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Childrens Publishing Division, from The
Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper, illustrated by N. C. Wyeth. Illustrations 1919 Charles Scribners Sons; copyright renewed
1947 Carolyn B. Wyeth.
pg. xxi; 9-B Photographic print. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
pg. xxi; 17-B Cut-and-pasted photoreproductions and papers, gouache, pencil, and colored pencil, on cardboard, 1338 x 1834 in. (34 x 47.6 cm.).
Blanchette Rockefeller Fund (377.1971). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Digital Image The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by
SCALA/Art Resource, New York. Art Estate of Romare Bearden Trusts / Licensed by VAGA, New York.
xxii
PICTURING AMERICA
each pot, circular coils of clay were layered over a flat base
and then given a smooth surface by hand or use of a scraper.
The smoothed surface was covered with a slip (a thin mixture
of clay and water) and painted with a mineral-based color.
When the pot was dry, it was fired, or baked, in a kiln to
harden it and set the decoration.
We do not know how these jars were used. The cylindrical
shape, which is rare in Anasazi pottery, varies slightly with
each pot: some are fatter, some are taller, and some are a
little tipsy. They have flat bottoms and can stand upright. Small
holes or loops near the opening show they could be hung
by some kind of cord, perhaps, as some archaeologists think,
for use in rituals.
The geometric designs, painted with black lines on a white
background, give the pots their individual character. The
designs are hand drawn with a relaxed asymmetry. Squares
stretch over one jar in a form-fitting grid that seems to reveal
every bulge of a squirming body beneath. A crooked line of
triangles travels down another, and up and down on a third.
The slimmest pot is made to look even thinner by vertical
striping, and the two widest pots appear even broader
because their designs twist from the vertical and move
diagonally across them.
Chaco Canyons dominance was short-lived. By the end
of the thirteenth century, the Anasazi had abandoned the
area and migrated south and east to smaller settlements.
Their descendants are the Pueblo peoples who now inhabit
the region.
1-A.1 Anasazi pottery, c. 1100, Pueblo Bonito, Chaco Canyon. Jar at left, height 1014 in. (26 cm.).
Photograph by P. Hollembeak. American Museum of Natural History, New York.
Carl Toolak was among the first of the baleen basket weavers.
This basket shows his style from around 1940. Because baleen
is too stiff to form the tiny coils that begin the basket at the
center bottom, Toolak used a starter plate of ivory. He stitched
the first strip of baleen to the edge of the starter plate through
holes drilled around its perimeter, and finished the separate
starter piece for the lid with a knob.
Baleen occurs naturally in a range of shades from light brown to
black. Toolak expanded his color range by adding a decoration
of white bird quills to the weave. The body of the container is
glossy and is enriched with a pattern of white stitches grouped
in twos and threes. The pattern lines up with that of the domeshaped lid, where trios of white stitches elongate into lines that
converge toward the playful centerpiece of the work a
carved ivory seal who looks as though he has just popped
his head above icy water.
These trays were used to separate out the chaff (the dry, outer
husk) from the grain of rice after it was crushed in a mortar and
pestle. Chaff is lighter than grain and when tossed together in
a tray, the chaff floats away on the wind. The winnowing tray
and other basket types were made of bulrush (a type of marsh
grass) and saw palmetto or white oak, all of which grew in the
area. The structure of the basket provides its only decoration.
Its design evokes the motion of the tray in use: the spiraling
coils seem to contract and expand the center advancing,
then retreating while color variations and little diagonal
stitches make the disk appear to rotate.
CARL TOOLAK (c. 1885 c. 1945 ), Baleen Basket, 1940
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
How are these objects similar? All are meant to hold something; all are made from natural materials; all are circular; all but
one are decorated; all but one were made by American Indians.
E|M|S
If you could touch these objects, how would each feel? The clay pots are smooth, possibly cool. The Mara Martnez pot may
feel rough in the design area. The baskets are rough or knobby. The baleen basket has a smooth figure on top.
E|M|S
What natural materials from their environments did the artists and craftsmen use to create these functional containers?
Clay was used for the Southwestern pots by the Anasazi, Sikytki, and Mara Martnez. Animal materialwhalebone/baleen and
ivorywere used by Toolak. Plant materials willow, redbud, and fern rootwere used by Keyser, and rush was used for the
basket by Johnson.
E|M|S
Why did the Washoe create and use mainly baskets rather than ceramic vessels? The Washoe moved often and baskets were
lighter and easier to carry.
E|M|S
The Mara Martnez jar, the Anasazi jars, and the Sikytki bowl were all made in the American Southwest by the Anasazi
or their Pueblo descendants. What features do they have in common? How are ancient jars different from Pueblo
pottery? All the pots were formed with clay coils. They feature geometric decorations, but the designs of the two later pieces also
include forms based on nature. The Anasazi jars have a layer of white slip over the clay, but the newer ones have exposed clay.
E|M|S
What inspired Mara Martnez and Julian Martnez to create black-on-black ceramics? The discovery of ancient pottery did.
E|M|S
Have students create a chart to compare Louisa Keysers basket to Carl Toolaks basket. Create three columns. Label the
first column Features to Compare. Label the second column Carl Toolak and the third column Louisa Keyser. In the
first column, list general features that the baskets share. In the artists columns, have students compare and contrast how
Toolak and Keyser handled each of the general features.
FEATURES TO COMPARE
Carl Toolak
Louisa Keyser
white
reddish brown
round or bulbous
INTERPRET
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Ask students how American tourism in the Southwest influenced American Indian pottery. Because tourists wanted to buy
their pottery, artists began to create more of it and renewed this ancient craft.
M|S
In the early twentieth century, what did tourists appreciate about Southwest pottery? They appreciated its design,
handmade craft, and the natural beauty of the materials.
M|S
Why did collectors prefer pottery that was signed by the artist? The artists signature shows who made it and that it is an
authentic piece of art created by this artist. Often a pot by a known artist is more valuable than an anonymous one.
CONNECTIONS
1b
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M
Have students locate the lanterns and the crosses at the top of the towers and dome. Look for slight variances in the
symmetry of this building.
A buttress is on the right corner, the mission wall extends to the right, and windows vary slightly in size on each side of the building.
E|M
Ask students what the original function of the two towers on the front of the church was.
They were bell towers, used to summon the community.
E|M|S
Encourage students to compare Mission Concepcins 1755 faade with the way it looks today.
It was originally plastered white with red, blue, yellow, and black patterns. Now it is exposed rock.
Why is it no longer white with painted designs?
The plaster and designs weathered away.
E|M|S
INTERPRET
E|M|S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask students why the Spanish and American Indians constructed Europeanstyle churches in America.
The Spanish wanted churches like those in Spain.
Show students examples of seventeenth-century Baroque church faades. (The Obradorio faade of the famous Spanish
pilgrimage church of Santiago de Compostela in Spain is an excellent example. Images are available on the Internet.)
Discuss why Mission Concepcin is much simpler than many of these ornate churches.
This frontier church was constructed with local building materials and artisans. Although some Spanish artists worked on the
mission, most of the builders were American Indians who learned European construction techniques from the Spanish.
M|S
CONNECTIONS
2a
2-A John Singleton Copley (1738 1815), Paul Revere, 1768. Oil on canvas,
3518 x 2812 in. (89.22 x 72.39 cm.). Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Gift of
Joseph W. Revere, William B. Revere, and Edward H. R. Revere, 30.781.
Photograph 2008 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
10
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Find the three engraving tools on the table. Why do you think Copley included these tools and the teapot in this portrait?
They suggest that Revere was a silversmith.
M|S
E|M|S
We know that some artists (such as Leonardo da Vinci) were left-handed. Ask students if they can prove whether
Paul Revere worked with his right or left hand according to clues in the painting.
He is not working.
If he is right-handed, why does he hold the pot in the left?
He rests the pot on the leather pad in order to engrave on it.
M|S
By placing Reveres hand under his chin, what does Copley suggest about Reveres personality?
This pose usually indicates a thoughtful person.
M|S
What might the combination of these three things tell us about Paul Revere as an artist: the pot he made and prominently
holds, the thoughtful gesture of the hand on chin, and the emphasis on his right eye?
His work is a combination of handiwork, thought, and artistic vision.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Paul Revere was a craftsman in a busy studio. How has Copley idealized the setting for this portrait?
If this were truly an artists workbench, it would probably be littered with tools and bits of metal.
CONNECTIONS
11
2b
12
S I LV E R O F T H E 1 8 T H , 1 9 T H , & 2 0 T H C E N T U R I E S
13
14
of the modern era, a style that became known as Art Deco. Art
Deco taste favored the sleek efficiency of the modern machine
age. (See 15-B for another example of Art Deco style.)
Designer Gene Theobald and product stylist Virginia Hamill
developed a type of tea service called the dinette set, whose
components fit closely together in a carrying tray. The set could
be moved easily as a unit and took up less space in the chic
apartments of the urban sophisticates for whom they were
designed. The tongue-in-cheek humor of Theobalds Diament
Dinette Set of 1928 makes it look less like a tea service than an
ocean liner steaming across the table or a miniature version of
the skyline glimpsed from an apartment window.
Inventive design was more important than the value of the
raw material, and the set is plated rather than solid silver.
A new machine-age material called Bakelitea type of plastic
developed between 1907 and 1909was used for the knobs
on the lids. The flat planes and straight lines of the silver reflect
images and light differently than Reveres or Browns pots. The
earlier pots distort reflections, which glide over the surface and
accent their curving shapes. The planes of the Diament Dinette
Set create mirror-like images, which sometimes make the
plane look solid and other times make it look transparent. The
reflective play of surface and depth gives the tea set a lively and
sparkling appearance, a feature impossible to capture
in a static photograph.
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Have students compare the form and texture of the three teapots on this poster. Ask students how they are alike.
They are all shiny metal with spouts, handles, and lids with knobs.
Which teapot reflects light like a smooth, flat mirror? Theobalds does; the other two would create distorted reflections.
E|M|S
Have students compare Reveres 1796 teapot to the prerevolutionary teapot he holds in Copleys portrait
of him in 2-A.
The prerevolutionary teapot is much more rounded than the later one.
How is Reveres 1796 teapot like classical architecture?
Its body is fluted like a classical column.
After the American Revolution why did this Neoclassical style appeal to Americans?
Neoclassical designs were based on Roman and Greek architecture, which reminded viewers that their new countrys government
was based on ancient Greek and Roman ideals.
INTERPRET
E|M
Host a tea party by serving the class hot tea. Because youll probably use tea bags and disposable cups, explain to
students how different this experience is from how tea was served in the eighteenth century, when tea leaves were
carefully brewed in silver teapots and tea was served in fine china cups.
E|M|S
Ask students why drinking tea was a social event in the seventeenth century.
Because tea leaves were imported and expensive, an elaborate ritual for brewing and drinking it developed.
Why was drinking tea healthier than water? Boiling water to brew tea purified the water.
E|M|S
Have students describe the function of each of the pieces in Browns tea service.
Left to right: The sugar bowl held sugar; the teapot brewed and served tea; the creamer held and served cream; and the waste
bowl or slop caught the remains of cold tea and used tea leaves before more tea was served.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
E|M|S
Ask students why seventeenth- and eighteenth-century teapots were made of silver.
The silver would hold the heat necessary for brewing tea, and silver teapots are beautiful.
M|S
In addition to their functionality and beauty, why did colonial Americans want to own teapots?
They indicated wealth, and because they could be engraved with the owners identification, they were considered a safer financial
investment than silver coins that could be stolen. If necessary, silver teapots could be melted down and used as money.
M|S
Ask students what developments made teapots such as Theobalds more affordable than Reveres and Browns teapots.
Silver was discovered in Nevada and electroplating or applying silver over a cheaper base metal was invented. Also, the
introduction of industrialization meant that machines rather than individual craftsmen made teapots.
E|M|S
Ask students which teapot they would rather use and why.
CONNECTIONS
Historical Connections:
15
3-A Grant Wood (1892 1942), The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, 1931. Oil on
Masonite, 30 x 40 in. (76.2 x 101.6 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1950 (50.117). Photograph 1988 The
Metropolitan Museum of Art. Art Estate of Grant Wood / Licensed by
VAGA, New York.
16
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Have each student write a list of at least five different objects they see in the painting. Let them point out what they see
to their classmates.
E|M|S
Have students locate Paul Revere on the horse. Ask where he seems to be going and where he has been.
E|M|S
How did the artist show that Revere was on an urgent mission?
He leans forward as his horses tail and legs stretch out in a gallop.
E|M|S
Have students look at the painting with their eyes squinted. What do they see first? They probably will see the church.
How did the artist emphasize the church? It is large and its brightness contrasts with the dark background.
M|S
Ask students to describe how Wood guides them through the story in this picture. Have them follow the road through
the scene beginning from the distant lights in the upper right.
INTERPRET
E|M
Encourage students to guess what time of night this might be. What clues has Wood given us? The dark sky, deep shadows,
muted background colors, lights in the houses, and people in white night clothes suggest that it is late at night.
E|M
Ask what the biggest light source in this scene is. They will probably say the moon.
Why do students think this? The shadows are on the left of objects.
E|M|S
Ask students if they have ever seen moonlight this bright. Does it seem natural? Why or why not? What other light in this
painting seems unusual for an eighteenth-century village?
The house lights are a little too bright for candlelight, and more like yet-to-be-invented electric lights.
E|M|S
Encourage students to guess what some of the buildings are. One example is the small building that might be an outhouse
(this was before indoor plumbing) that is in front of a schoolhouse topped with a cupola.
M|S
If students have studied New England, ask them how this scene is typical of a New England village.
The land is hilly with a river near the town. Houses with chimneys cluster around a white church with a tall steeple.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Ask students where someone might stand to view this scene from this angle.
Most likely one would take a position above the town, maybe on a high hill or even on a tall building.
Discuss what Wood implies about this scene by painting it from this angle.
He suggests that it is a story with a feeling of fantasy. Were looking down on the scene as though we were flying over it in a
dream or as though it were a toy village.
M|S
What else makes this village seem not quite real more like a stage set?
Students might notice that the lighting seems like a spotlight. Some may notice the lack of details; everything is simplified or
slightly stylized to look like a perfect village even most of the trees are round with smooth edges.
S
Have students explain why they think this is or is not an appropriate way to depict this important American legend.
CONNECTIONS
Historical Connections:
17
3b
18
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
How old do students think Washington appears in this painting? Why? Explain that he was in his sixties.
E|M|S
Gilbert Stuart wanted to reflect his sitters inner character through their faces and outward appearance. From this portrait
how would you describe Washingtons inner character?
Students may suggest terms such as serene, intelligent, dignified, or calm.
Stuart saw great passion in Washingtons features. Ask students if they also see this. Why or why not?
E|M|S
Ask students to find these objects and tell what they might represent.
Rainbow: Located in the top right corner; it may signify the promise of better times.
Medallion with stars and stripes: The medallion, located on the top of the chair, is part of the Great Seal of the United States.
Ink stand with quill: Found on the table and engraved with Washingtons family coat of arms, it was used for writing possibly
Books (on and below the table): They concern the government and founding of the United States.
Saber: During the Revolution, Washington commanded the American army, and as president, he was commander in chief
of the military.
E|M|S
Encourage students to notice the details of the background: the drapery, columns on a plain wall, clouds in the sky, and
the rainbow. Explain that this type of background was often used in European portraits of nobles and that Gilbert Stuart
had studied painting in Europe.
INTERPRET
M|S
Ask students why they think Stuart painted Washington with his arm outstretched.
This pose was oratorical and used by people making speeches.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask students how Washingtons appearance reflects how he wanted people to see him. Remind them that contemporary
European rulers wore ornate wigs and brightly colored clothes.
Washington wears a plain black suit and no wig. He showed that the United States president was a citizen, not a king. This
emphasized his belief that all men are created equal.
S
Ask students why Stuart made copies of this painting. Why did so many people want portraits of George Washington?
Americans respected Washington as their great leader. They wanted portraits of him in civic buildings as well as in their own
homes. Even an English nobleman who had supported the American cause wanted Washingtons portrait.
CONNECTIONS
19
4-A Emanuel Leutze (1816 1868), Washington Crossing the Delaware, 1851. Oil on canvas,
149 x 255 in. (378.5 x 647.7 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of John Stewart
Kennedy, 1897 (97.34). Photograph 1992 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
20
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask the students to compare the size of this twelve- by twenty-one-foot painting with something in the classroom,
such as a wall. Explain that the figures in this painting are almost life-size.
E
E|M
Have students describe the mens clothing. Explain that they wear a variety of hats and shirts representative of their regions.
E|M|S
Ask students how Leutze emphasized Washington and the American flag.
He surrounds their upper bodies with white light, almost like a spotlight or halo.
Most of the colors in this painting are muted blues, grays, and browns. What bright color did Leutze include?
He included the color red.
In what part of the picture is this red located? It is found only in Washingtons boat.
Why do you think he used red only in Washingtons boat? Red is a bright color and helps to lead our eye to Washington.
E|M|S
Ask students to describe how Leutze created an illusion of great distance in this painting.
The distant men and land are smaller, lighter, bluer, and less detailed than those in the foreground.
E|M|S
Ask students who and what are moving in this scene. Who is standing still?
Only Washington and the distant land seem to stand still in the midst of moving water, ice, wind, and men struggling to control
the boat.
How are they controlling the boat? They are rowing the boat across the Delaware River, pushing ice floes away from the boat
with their feet and oars, and trying to steer around the ice.
How do you think they felt when they reached the opposite bank? They were cold, tired, and wet.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Have students describe the weather and water conditions. Why isnt it an ideal day for boating?
A powerful storm is approaching from the right, creating a strong, bitter-cold wind. Floating ice clogs the swift, rough river.
Why would anyone want to cross the Delaware River in this weather?
Washington believed that the British were planning to attack his army as soon as the river froze. Washington knew the British
would not expect an attack during this storm.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
E|M|S
Ask students to describe the flag. Even though it is knotted and wrinkled by the wind, ask them to find symbols that
appear on todays flag.
In the pictured flag, a circle rather than rows of stars are on an upper blue field, while red and white stripes fill the lower
part of the flag.
S
CONNECTIONS
Historical Connections:
Betsy Ross
Geography: rivers
Literary Connections and Primary
Documents: Crossing the Delaware: A
21
4b
22
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Have students stand like Franklin with their weight resting on one leg and with the other leg bent. Notice how this is
more relaxed than stiffly standing on two feet. Explain that this is a classical contrapposto pose. Students might view
ancient Greek and Roman sculptures in this pose such as the nude Doryphoros (Spear-Bearer) of Polykleitos.
E|M|S
Even though Powers lived later than Franklin, he created a realistic portrait of him. Ask students how Powers learned
about Franklins clothes and face.
Powers studied pieces of Franklins clothing imported from America, Houdons bust of Franklin, and Martins bust-length painting
of Franklin. (Students may view Houdons bust and Martins portrait on the Internet.)
M|S
Have students compare Franklins pose with that of Gilbert Stuarts George Washington in 3-B.
Washington stands squarely on two feet, while Franklin rests most of his weight on one foot. Washington holds one arm out like a
gesture in a speech, while Franklins arms are close to his body with his chin resting thoughtfully on his fist.
Why is Franklin dressed so casually? Franklin is dressed like an everyday citizen, in his role as an inventor.
Explain that both Washington and Franklin wanted others to think of them as ordinary American citizens. When Franklin
was at the French court seeking aid for the American Revolution, he also dressed in plain clothing rather than the silks and
M|S
Ask students why Powers included the tree stump in this statue.
The tree stump helps stabilize Franklins body. Secondary students may know that classical Roman sculptures often had
similar supports.
This classical art device suggests a classical sculpture. Also, the line in the center of the tree trunk shows that it was struck
by lightning. Franklin was famous for his experiments with electricity, such as dangerously flying a kite in an electrical storm.
INTERPRET
M|S
Ask students why the United States government wanted a statue of Benjamin Franklin in the U.S. Capitol.
Franklin was a member of the convention that framed the U.S. Constitution, which created the Senate. Students may read
Franklins speech supporting the adoption of the Constitution on the Internet.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Nineteenth-century sculptors often depicted leaders in classical Greek or Roman robes, reminding viewers that American
government had its roots in ancient Greece. Remind students of the Statue of Libertys robes. Powers was criticized for
showing Franklin in contemporary clothing. Ask students why Powers chose to show Franklin in mid-eighteenth-century
clothing rather than a Roman toga.
He wanted viewers to see and understand Franklin as a real person and to know how he actually looked.
CONNECTIONS
and inventions
Thomas Paine
Civics: Founding Fathers;
Constitutional Conventions
23
5a
5-A Thomas Cole (1801 1848), View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton,
Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm The Oxbow, 1836. Oil on canvas, 5112 x 76 in.
(130.8 x 193 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Mrs. Russell Sage, 1908
(08.228). Image The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
24
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Explain to students that an oxbow is a U-shaped piece of wood that fits under and around the neck of an ox, with
its upper ends attached to the bar of a yoke. Where is the oxbow in this painting?
It is located in the central curve of the river.
E|M|S
Thomas Cole sketching in a top hat: He is located in the lower center between large rocks.
M|S
Have students compare and contrast the left and right sides of this painting. Which side is wilderness and which is
cultivated farmland? This comparison may be written in a Venn diagram. Draw two overlapping circles. Where the circles
overlap, list objects that appear on both sides of the painting. In the left circle, describe the objects on the left side of the
painting, and in the right circle, describe objects on the right. Examples of Venn diagram answers:
INTERPRET
trees
indications of weather
land
E|M|S
Ask students why someone living in a city might want a picture like this in his home.
In the 1830s, many Americans were moving from farms to cities. This scene could remind them of the countrys rural peace
and beauty. Others might have seen this view when they were on vacation and wanted to remember it.
E|M
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask a volunteer to pretend to be a TV weathercaster and give the weather forecast for the next few hours for this scene
of the Connecticut River valley.
S
In the 1830s, Americas wilderness was being settled. Untamed forests were transformed into cultivated farms
and towns. Ask students what the approaching storm over the wild forest might symbolize.
It could suggest the coming destruction of the wilderness or the taming of wilderness by settlement.
Point out the double meaning of the Hebrew word (Noah and inverted Almighty) carved into the center hillside.
Ask students to consider what Coles message might be about the rapidly changing face of the American continent.
CONNECTIONS
25
5b
26
from books or from stories passed down from his father. The
novel takes place in 1757, during the French and Indian War,
when the British and French fought over land that had long
been home to Eastern Woodlands tribes. Wyeth was yet
another generation removed from those historical events;
like most Americans of his time, he possessed only the vaguest
understanding of the original American peoples.
Although rooted in history, The Last of the Mohicans was
Coopers invention. To criticism that the characters were unre
alistic, Cooper replied that the novel was intended only to
evoke the past. The illustrator took the artists poetic license
one step further. This image, which appears on the cover of
the book, was apparently inspired by Coopers character
Uncas, Hawkeyes faithful friend and one of the last Mohicans:
At a little distance in advance stood Uncas, his whole per
son thrown powerfully into view. The travelers anxiously
regarded the upright, flexible figure of the young Mohican,
graceful and unrestrained in the attitudes and movements
of nature.
Cooper stresses the American Indians identification with the
natural world, and Wyeth accordingly portrays Uncas in har
mony with the landscape, framed by a formation of clouds. He
retains other elements of Coopers description as well, notably
the account of Uncass
dark, glancing, fearful eye, alike terrible and calm; the bold
outline of his high haughty features, pure in their native
redthe dignified elevation of his receding forehead,
together with all the finest proportions of a noble head,
bared to the generous scalping tuft.
To capture the commanding presence of the character, Wyeth
adopted a low viewpoint, so that the powerful body of Uncas
appears larger than life as he advances right to the edge of the
canvas, the unspoiled American landscape spread out below
and behind him. In other respects, Wyeth alters Coopers
portrayal of Uncas. The Uncas whom Wyeth pictures is barechested, covered in war paint, and crowned with a feather,
even though Cooper points out in the novel that Uncass per
son was more than usually screened by a green and fringed
hunting shirt, like that of the white man. Even though the plot
of The Last of the Mohicans depends upon the American Indians
carrying muskets alongside European soldiers, Wyeth portrays
Uncas with a dagger, a tomahawk, and a bow and arrow
weapons of precolonial warfare and the customary attributes of
an Indian brave. While Cooper suggests the complexity of the
character, Wyeth generalizes and romanticizes the Indian heros
appearance. In this way, he conforms to his eras understanding
of American Indians, which was tightly bound to the ideal of an
untamed wilderness.
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
M|S
What does Wyeth suggest about the health and character of this American Indian?
He shows him to be strong, healthy, muscular, and standing straight. The intense stare of his eyes, his downturned mouth, and
the set of his shoulders suggest that he is determined, alert, serious, and ready to act.
S
Explain to students that this painting is an illustration for a fictional novel, The Last of the Mohicans.
Ask why they think this is or is not an accurate depiction of an American Indian.
Even though James Fenimore Cooper described this character as wearing a shirt, Wyeth shows him shirtless. Wyeth also had very
little knowledge of American Indian symbols.
Have students debate whether this novel should or should not have been illustrated with historically accurate likenesses
of American Indians.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
CONNECTIONS
C OV E R I L LU S T R AT I O N F O R T H E L A S T O F T H E M O H I C A N S , 1 9 1 9 , N. C. WYETH [18821945]
27
6a
28
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students what they notice first when they look at this print. It will probably be the large flamingo.
Have them describe how Audubon emphasized the largest flamingo. He made it fill the page, centered it in the composition,
and placed its bright color against a relatively plain and muted background.
E|M|S
Where are there patterns on this bird? Patterns are found on the beak and in the pattern of the folded wings.
E|M|S
What is in the background of this print? We find other flamingos, marshes, water.
What are the birds doing in this image? They appear to be looking for food.
E|M|S
Describe how Audubon indicated the large size of the flamingos natural habitat.
He suggested distance by making water in the background lighter than that in the foreground and painting distant birds smaller
and in lighter colors than the closest flamingo.
M|S
Audubon gave the flamingo its character by drawing many kinds of lines. Ask students to identify some of the different
kinds of lines in the bird.
The bird has a wavy neck, wings made with smooth curves, and straight and angled legs.
E|M|S
Ask the students what they think the sketches at the top represent. They are rough drawings of the beak and feet.
Ask students to speculate about why they have been left in the print. Perhaps to give additional information how the beak
looks when it is open, how the foot looks from above; to fill the space at the top so it doesnt look bare in comparison to the
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Ask students why they think Audubon painted his subjects life-size rather than just creating smaller pictures of them.
He wanted viewers to understand the actual size of these birds and to see the details in their bodies and wings.
E|M|S
Why do you think that Audubon positioned the flamingo like this with its neck bent down?
He wished to fit this big bird on the page, to create a pleasing composition, and to show how this tall bird was able to eat food
in the water.
M|S
Have students explain what makes this print an artwork rather than just a scientific illustration.
Students may mention the life-like pose of the bird, the addition of the background, or the beauty of the composition.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Encourage students to consider why Audubon and other artists were intent on documenting American wildlife at this time
in Americas history.
As America was being settled and developed, there was a great interest in science and in learning about American plants
and animals. Artists often joined expeditions to explore and document the American continent and its life forms.
S
Ask how this print of a flamingo is different from the plastic flamingos that people sometimes place in their yards. Are both
types of flamingos art?
CONNECTIONS
29
6b
6-B George Catlin (1796 1872), Catlin Painting the Portrait of Mah-to-toh-pa
Mandan, 1861/1869. Oil on card mounted on paperboard, 1812 x 24 in. (47 x
62.3 cm.). Paul Mellon Collection. Image 2006 Board of Trustees, National
Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
30
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M
Have students explain the main subject of this scene. Is it Catlin painting or a Mandan chief?
It depicts Catlin creating art and is not just a portrait of the Mandan chief.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Why do you think all these people are so interested in watching Catlin paint a portrait?
They were familiar with American Indian paintings and may have been curious to see how the white man made his images.
Also, to many, creating realistic likenesses of people may have seemed like capturing their spirit on paper or canvas.
E|M|S
Tell students that when Catlin first painted Mah-to-toh-pas portrait, they were indoors, but Catlin changed the setting
when he painted this version. Ask students why they think Catlin might have done this.
One answer is that perhaps he thought an outdoor setting would be grander, would better reflect the Mandans home on the
plains, and would allow him to include more people in the scene.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
M|S
Explain to students that Catlin did not include in this painting all the weapons that the chief was wearing when he posed
for it. He said he left these out because he wanted to emphasize the grace and simplicity of this figure. Ask students if
they think it is or is not all right for an artist to change details in a painting such as this. How would our impression of
Ma-to-toh-pa change if he were wearing all his weapons?
CONNECTIONS
31
7a
7-A Ithiel Town and A. J. Davis, architects; design largely by Thomas Cole, Ohio
State Capitol, Columbus, Ohio, 1838 1861. Photograph Tom Patterson,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
32
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Have students compare this building to the modern ones behind it.
The modern buildings are taller with flat roofs and many more windows.
Why is this nineteenth-century building shorter than the modern ones?
Building materials and techniques of this era limited the height of buildings. Also elevators were not common in buildings until later
in the century.
E|M|S
Show students pictures of Greek temples such as the Parthenon. (They are plentiful on the Internet.)
Explain that the Ohio State Capitol is an example of Greek Revival, a popular nineteenth-century architectural style based
on classical Greek and Roman structures. Ask students how this resembles Greek architecture.
It has columns, a pediment, and is symmetrical. Like the ruins of ancient Greek buildings, which have been stripped of color, it is
built of light stone.
M|S
Locate and identify these architectural features that are found on classical Greek and Roman architecture.
Columns: They are the upright posts in the shape of cylinders on the porch.
Capitals: They sit like hats at the very top of the columns; the simple capitals are a variation of the Greek Doric style.
Pilasters: These are the vertical structures that resemble columns, but are instead attached to the walls on each side
of the porch.
Drum: It is the round doughnut-shaped structure at the top that supports the conical roof. It is not visible in this view.
Entablature: It is the two-part horizontal band supported by the column capitals and pilasters.
M|S
M|S
Ask students to explain why Greek Revival was a popular architecture style for government buildings in the nineteenth century.
Ancient Greece invented democracy as a form of government. At this time in history, Americans were becoming more democratic
with increased voter participation and awareness of their state legislatures, and states wished to express their identity in
their statehouses.
S
CONNECTIONS
Ordinances; statehood
Thomas Cole
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
33
7b
7-B George Caleb Bingham (1811 1879), The County Election, 1852. Oil on canvas,
38 x 52 in. (96.5 x 132.1 cm.). Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Mo., Gift of
Bank of America.
34
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students to guess what is happening in this painting. Look for clues. Its Election Day, 1852.
A seated man in a top hat who might be sketching or writing: He is located in the center thats the artist.
A man with a bandaged head and a horse and rider: They are in the center distance.
E|M|S
Ask students to describe how Bingham unified this scene so that many figures form a connected group.
He repeated shapes and colors and overlapped the bodies.
M|S
E|M|S
Ask students to describe the different shapes of hats in this painting. What do the hats suggest about the occupations
of these individuals?
The tall stiff hats with the small brims (top hats) probably belong to the politicians. Farmers and laborers wear hats with softer
crowns and wider brims.
S
What message does Bingham give in this crowded scene about the election process in American democracy?
A whole community of men, from rich to poor, comes together to vote. Notice how no one figure is emphasized or made
larger than others in this crowd. That suggests that all the votes are equal.
S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Have students compare this election scene with a contemporary American voting scene.
Today Americans vote with secret ballots in private booths rather than declaring their votes while surrounded by fellow citizens.
Women and African Americans would be among the voters. Today campaigners are kept a legal distance from the actual
polling place.
CONNECTIONS
35
8a
8-A Albert Bierstadt (1830 1902), Looking Down Yosemite Valley, California, 1865.
Oil on canvas, 6412 x 9612 in. (163.83 x 245.11 cm.). Birmingham Museum of Art,
Birmingham, Ala. (1991.879). Gift of the Birmingham Public Library.
36
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M
Where do you see trees reflected in water? It is in the center of the painting.
E|M
Describe the texture of the rocks. The rocks appear rough or weathered.
E|M|S
Tell students to write three or four words that they think of when they first see this painting. Have each student in turn say
one of the words that they wrote that another student hasnt offered so far. Write each word on the board or large paper.
Encourage students to explain what made them think of this word. Notice how many times words that refer to size and
grandeur are mentioned.
E|M|S
If a person were standing in the middle of this scene, about how large would he or she seem? Compare a six-foot tall
person to one of the trees; imagine how this person would feel in comparison to these mountains. How might he or she
describe this scene?
E|M|S
Ask students what they see first when they look at this painting.
Students may see the light area in the middle of the scene.
How does this light add to the drama of this scene?
The light creates dark shadows that dramatically contrast with the light, shining areas.
M|S
On a map, locate Yosemite National Park. Have students compare photographs of Yosemite Valley with Bierstadts
painting to understand how he exaggerated the size of the rock formations. (Photographs of this scene are on the
Internet.) Ask students to consider if the sun in the painting is rising or setting. (Consult a map for the orientation of the
rock formations in the painting Cathedral Spires and Sentinel Rock are on the left and El Capitn is on the right.)
INTERPRET
M|S
Bierstadt painted some of the rock formations in this painting taller than they really were. Ask students if they think this
exaggeration was dishonest. Have them explain why they do or do not believe that it is all right for an artist to exaggerate
In addition to exaggerating the size of the rocks, how else did Bierstadt make the West seem even grander than it was?
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask students what national event America was recovering from in 1865, when this scene was painted.
It was the Civil War.
Why did a scene like this offer hope to Americans?
Not only was it peaceful to look at, but it also reminded them of the Western frontier, spacious, beautiful country waiting to be
settled. Many saw the West as the promise of a new beginning.
S
Ask students to explain the role Bierstadts paintings played in the development of tourism to the West.
When people in the East saw Bierstadts grand interpretation of western scenery, they wanted to see it for themselves.
Within a few years, with the introduction of the railroad into this area, great numbers of tourists were able to visit Yosemite.
CONNECTIONS
Historical Connections:
Sierra Nevada
geology
37
8b
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Have students stand and link arms like the figures in the lower drawing. Discuss how standing and moving together like
this shows unity with the group.
E|M|S
Ask students what the people are doing in both of these drawings. In the top drawing, warriors are processing or parading; in the
lower one, men and women are dancing. Which figures are women? The women have a colored part in the center of their hair.
E|M|S
Ask students to describe how Black Hawk created a steady rhythm in each of these. He drew a line of similar figures equally
spaced across the page. Ask students to imagine the regular drum beat to which these figures are moving.
E|M|S
Ask students what materials Black Hawk used to create fine details in these drawings.
He used lined writing paper, colored pencils, and a pen. The pencil strokes are visible in the long dresses.
Before the Lakota lived on reservations, what materials did their warriorartists use to create similar traditional drawings
of their history and traditions? They painted similar images on teepee walls and robes made of buffalo hide.
M|S
Have students compare Black Hawks drawing of American Indians with Catlins painting (6-B) and N. C. Wyeths painting
(5-B). Ask which of these they think shows the most historically accurate clothing. Why?
American Indian artist Black Hawk was more accurate and familiar with details of his own peoples dress than artists of European
descent. In his painting, Catlin left out significant details. Wyeth created his work based upon current stereotypes of Indians for
How is the clothing in Wyeths and Catlins art similar to that in Black Hawks? In all three pieces of art, Indians wear feathers
in their hair. The chief in Catlins painting wears a fringed shirt and leggings like some of the warriors in Black Hawks painting.
Wyeths Mohican wears an armband and body and face paint as in Black Hawks drawing.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
What can we learn about the Lakota from these pictures that we might not understand if their history were just written
with words? We can see how they dressed.
E|M|S
What were winter counts and why did the Lakota and other Plains Indians create these?
Winter counts were paintings on buffalo hide recording communal histories of tribes or families.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
E|M|S
Ask students why it was difficult for Black Hawk and other Sans Arc Lakota families to have food during the winter
of 1880 1881. These Plains Indians were no longer able to hunt buffalo, one of their primary sources of food, because settlers
had killed the buffalo to near extinction.
E|M|S
Ask students how drawing these pictures helped Black Hawk earn money to feed his family. William Edward Caton, the
trader at the Cheyenne Agency in Dakota, paid Black Hawk thirty-eight dollars for the set of seventy-six drawings.
M|S
CONNECTIONS
George Catlin
39
9a
9-A Winslow Homer (1836 1910), The Veteran in a New Field, 1865. Oil on canvas,
2418 x 3818 in. (61.3 x 96.8 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Bequest of
40
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
How do we know? He holds a scythe and there is cut wheat around him.
Call students attention to the light and shadows on the man. Where is the sun?
It is high and to his right.
How do you think the man feels in this sun? He probably is hot and tired.
How do we know? Hes working so hard in the sun that he has taken his jacket off and laid it on the ground in the right foreground.
E|M|S
in the foreground.
In what bands are the mans feet? They are buried in cut wheat.
INTERPRET
M|S
If this man had been in a grain field the previous year, what would he probably have been doing?
Probably fighting a battle, since a number of Civil War battles were fought in grain fields.
What subjects had Winslow Homer been sketching for the past few years?
He had been sketching Civil War soldiers.
S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
CONNECTIONS
41
9b
42
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Compare this portrait to that of Lincoln on a penny. How are they different?
In this one he faces front, but he is shown in profile on the penny. Also, his beard is fuller on the penny.
E|M|S
Suggest that students sit as Lincoln sits in this photograph. Notice that his head is turned slightly so that we see
the outline of his cheek. Imagine having to sit perfectly still for three full minutes.
E|M|S
Compare the size of his hands to his face. Which is in sharper focus, the hands or face?
The face is in sharper focus.
Why might his hands be slightly blurred? What might he be holding in his hands?
He holds a pen and eyeglasses; the blurring shows that Lincoln moved his hands during the long exposure.
Ask what the pen and glasses might symbolize.
Perhaps they show Lincolns learning and the importance of the executive office of the president.
E|M|S
E|M|S
Ask students to describe Lincolns expression. How does he feel? Is he sad, happy, bored, tired, or something else?
Although he has a slight smile, his face is haggard, and he is probably tired and sad after four years of bloody civil war.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
CONNECTIONS
43
10 a
10-A Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848 1907), Robert Gould Shaw and the Fifty-fourth
Regiment Memorial, Beacon and Park streets, Boston, Massachusetts, 1884 1897.
Bronze, 11 x 14 ft. (3.35 x 4.27 m.). Photograph by Carol M. Highsmith.
44
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M
Ask students to find a drum. It is on the far right. Where are the flags? They are on the left, behind the rifles.
E|M|S
Have students look closely at the individual faces. Which ones wear mustaches and beards?
E|M|S
What do they carry on their backs? They shoulder bed rolls and packs.
Both wear caps with visors, but the foot soldiers hats are more wrinkled. Shaw wears a long jacket and boots.
What does Shaw hold? He holds a sword in one hand and his horses reins in the other.
E|M|S
Have students discuss how artists can create rhythm in works of visual art. How did Saint-Gaudens create a sense of
rhythm in this relief?
He repeated the slant of leg and body lines and shapes at regular intervals across the sculpture. (Even the horses legs match the
slant of the marching soldiers legs.) The repeated rifles create a steady rhythm in the top half of the sculpture. Only Shaws
upright form and his horses neck interrupt the steady march across the sculpture.
E|M|S
How did Saint-Gaudens create a sense of depth in this sculpture? How do you know that some soldiers are closer to
viewers than others?
Soldiers who are closer to us stand out farther from the background; they are in greater relief. The soldiers at the back are in low
relief. The closer forms also overlap the more distant ones.
Which figure is closest to the viewer (in highest relief)? Robert Shaw is.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
How do you know? As the only mounted figure, he is above the other soldiers; he carries a sword, and his jacket has the fancy
cuffs of an officers uniform. Also, the title tells us that this honors Robert Shaw.
E|M|S
This was commissioned to honor and remember Robert Shaw, but who else does it commemorate?
It honors the foot soldiers of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Ask why students think this monument was made of bronze rather than marble or wood.
Bronze lasts longer outside; it reflects light and is dark and solemn. It can be worked in minute detail, and thin forms like rifles and
reins do not break easily.
S
What does the winged figure in the sky hold? She holds poppies and an olive branch.
She may represent an angel. The poppies usually symbolize death and remembrance, and the olive branch, peace and victory.
Remind students that artificial poppies are worn on Veterans Day to remember Americas war veterans.
CONNECTIONS
45
46
Q U I LT S : 1 9 T H T H R O U G H 2 0 T H C E N T U R I E S
47
Amish houses are modest, and quilts provide not only pattern
and bold color but an outlet for womens creativity. Amish
quilts made in Lancaster County between approximately1875
and 1950 are noted for their rich, solid colors, symmetrical
design, and emphasis on a central motif: characteristics that
give the compositions a sense of quiet grandeur. Within a lim
ited number of quilt patterns, the color choices allowed by the
restrictions of the Bishop (the communally elected leader of a
district), may nevertheless permit a broad range of visual
effects. The strong color contrast in two of the quilts (10-B.3
and 10-B.4) causes the bars to begin to quiver as you look at
them. In another (10-B.5), slender bars will appear to shift.
The pulsing energy of the star quilt (10-B.6) is held in check by
the wide purple border that just touches the tips of its points.
Many quilts are enriched with stitches in one or more patterns
diamond shapes, feathers, wreaths, vines, and flowers
that add another layer of technical and visual complexity.
Although earlier quilts like those reproduced here are thought
to be the result of individual efforts among the Lancaster
County Amish, in more recent times women often have
gathered together to share their needle working skills in
community events called quilting bees or frolics.
48
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Ask students to point out ladders and circles in Greenlees Crazy Quilt.
E|M|S
Ask students why they think quilt patterns like Greenlees were called crazy quilts.
Its an informal pattern with shapes that go in random directions.
E|M|S
Encourage students to find pieces of a printed fabric repeated several times in Greenlees quilt.
A brown and pink floral is repeated in the second row, third square, and in the third row, second and third squares. A red, white,
and black plaid is in the third row, second and third squares.
E|M|S
Stitched designs are in the second row, second square, and in the third row, first square, as well as in many other places.
E|M|S
In McCords Grandmothers Fan Quilt, how are most of the squares alike? A fan is in each corner of almost all the squares.
Find the two squares with fans in only two corners. They are in the second row, fifth square, and in the bottom row, fifth square.
E|M|S
Have students compare the patterns of Greenlees Crazy Quilt with that of McCords Grandmothers Fan Quilt. What is
the main difference between these two quilts? Greenlees is made primarily of parallel lines like ladders and McCords has
wedge shapes forming circles. How did both quilters create unity in their quilt designs? They repeated colors, shapes, and
patterns, and arranged their design into an ordered grid.
M|S
Ask which quilts on this poster the students think took the most advance planning and why.
It was probably the Amish quilts because of their geometric regularity.
Which ones do you think took the longest time to sew?
The ones made from many small pieces of fabric and with the finest stitches took the longest to construct.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Ask students why women made quilts.The main reason was to keep their families warm, but quilts also added decoration and
color to homes. Many women also enjoyed designing and sewing quilts.
E|M|S
Ask why quilters often sewed small bits of fabric together rather than using one large piece of material. By using fabric
scraps and pieces of discarded clothing, they could create inexpensive bed covers.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
E|M|S
Ask students how quilts could record a familys history. Quilt pieces made from old clothes could remind the family of the
people who wore them and special occasions when they wore them.
M|S
Show students examples of kente cloth. (There are many images of kente cloth on the Internet.) Ask how Greenlees
quilt is similar to kente cloth designs. They both have contrasting parallel bands of color that resemble ladders.
S
Ask students what nineteenth-century developments made it easier for American women to make quilts.
The invention of the cotton gin and power loom and opening of New England textile factories made commercially woven and
printed fabric available and affordable. Catalogs and magazines printed quilt patterns. The introduction of sewing machines
made sewing quicker.
CONNECTIONS
Q U I LT S : 1 9 T H T H R O U G H 2 0 T H C E N T U R I E S
49
11a
11-A Thomas Eakins (1844 1916), John Biglin in a Single Scull, c. 1873. Watercolor on
off-white wove paper, 19516 x 2478 in. (49.2 x 63.2 cm.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
Fletcher Fund, 1924 (24.108). Photograph 1994 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
50
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
E|M|S
In watercolor, artists sometimes purposely leave areas blank to reveal the white color of the paper.
Where do you see very white areas that are probably the paper?
These areas are located in the highlights on the waves in the foreground, the clouds, and the lightest part of Biglins shirt.
E|M|S
Ask students what geometric shape Biglins head, body, boat, and arms form, and ask them to point out the shape.
They form a triangle.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Have students extend their arms and lean forward and pretend to row as John Biglin does in the painting. Ask them
how his hands and arms might move in the next few seconds.
E|M|S
Ask students which direction the boat is moving. It is moving to the right.
Which boat is ahead in the scull race? John Biglins scull is ahead.
Biglin could leave it behind, or the other scull could catch up with Biglin and soon pass him.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
E|M|S
Have students describe this mans expression. What can you tell about his character from this painting?
He seems serious and determined.
S
What does this picture suggest about Americans leisure activities in the late 1880s?
John Biglins dress suggests that he is not wealthy. There are many boats on this river in Philadelphia, a large American city.
Many Americans had time to pursue water sports.
Why is Biglin the only single scull rower shown in the painting?
The subject is Biglin as an individual, challenging himself as much as competing against others.
CONNECTIONS
Geography: rivers
Science: anatomy
51
11b
52
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Have students write a list of adjectives to describe this room. Ask them to share their words with the class. Many may
mention riches or wealth. Ask them what makes this room seem rich.
There is an extensive use of gold here, and gold is associated with riches.
M|S
What objects in this room might seem exotic or foreign to Western Europeans and Americans?
The peacocks are Asian birds. Blue and white Chinese ceramics fill the shelves. The woman in the painting above the fireplace
stands on an Oriental rug, in front of an Asian screen, and wears a robe like a kimono.
E|M|S
How did Whistler create harmony in this room or make it seem as if it all goes together?
He painted most of the room peacock blue and repeated metallic gold details throughout the room. Only the warm pink tones
of the painting contrast with the blues and greens.
E|M|S
Describe how Whistler made his painting of the woman an important part of the rooms overall design.
The painting is centered over the fireplace and surrounded by gold shelves and panels that match its gold frame.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Imagine people in this room when it was first designed. How would they dress?
In the 1870s, women wore long, elaborately constructed dresses and men, cravats or bow ties, fitted jackets, and long trousers.
What might they do in a room like this?
The room was originally a dining room. Students may imagine parties or groups of wealthy people dining and admiring the room
and its collection of ceramics.
S
How does this room embody Whistlers philosophy of art for arts sake?
The owner intended it to be a dining room and a place to display a collection of fine East Asian porcelain, but after Whistler
painted it, the room draws more attention to itself as a work of art. It contains no moral message, but there is symbolism in the
design of the peacock fight, which refers to a dispute between Whistler and the rooms owner.
CONNECTIONS
Historical Connections:
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
53
12 a
54
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Posing for a portrait painted in oils can be a long process involving many sittings. Have students sit on a chair (or low table) in
the pose Homer assumes in this painting. Ask them to describe how it makes them feel.
Sitting slumped over and sideways with one foot dangling limply and the other poised against the rung of the chair gives a sense of
being unsettled, with a desire to squirm around.
E|M|S
Ask students to sit with a book on their laps and read out loud, as Homers mother does. Ask them to describe how this
pose makes them feel.
Sitting as Homers mother does probably makes them feel focused and still, but also very aware of what the person who leans on
them is doing.
E|M|S
Ask students what the difference between the two poses says about how each sitter probably felt about posing for this picture.
E|M
Homer is dressed in an outfit based on a story that was extremely popular with mothers. However, this costume was also
beginning to be associated with being a mammas boy. Ask students if they think Homer is portrayed as a mammas boy
and to point out why or why not?
Homer isnt acting obediently. He is sitting restlessly and awkwardly in his chair with a bored expression on his face, fingers spread,
and his back at an angle to his mother.
Ask students to imagine how they would pose under similar circumstances.
E|M|S
How has Sargent used the room and accessories in this painting to intensify Homers feeling of impatience?
The chair is too large for the boy to sit comfortably (his feet do not reach the floor), and the swirling pattern of the carpet reflects
his frustration with posing.
E|M|S
E|M|S
Sargent made his living painting portraits of wealthy Americans and Europeans. How do you think this work, done for a
friend, might have differed if it had been commissioned by a wealthy family who wanted to hang it in a prominent place in
their home?
Like George Washington in Gilbert Stuarts portrait (3-B), Homers mother probably would have been shown wearing more formal
and expensive clothing and perhaps also been portrayed looking out of the painting, Homer may have been made to appear less
restless, and the room and accessories would have been more elaborate.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Sargent was praised for his truthful portrayal of children at a time when childhood was becoming an important
focus in Europe and America. Pretend you are an art critic and explain what you consider to be truthful about
Homer Saint-Gaudens in this work.
CONNECTIONS
Economics: capitalism
55
12
12-B Childe Hassam (1859 1935), Allies Day, May 1917, 1917.
Oil on canvas, 3612 x 3014 in. (92.7 x 76.8 cm.). Gift of Ethelyn
McKinney in memory of her brother, Glenn Ford McKinney.
Image 2006 Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art,
Washington, D.C.
56
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Where are the trees in Central Park? They are the green in the lower center of the painting.
What is happening in the street? The street is filled with people. Perhaps there is a parade.
E|M|S
Have students locate several United States flags, two British Union Jacks, three French Tricolors, and a red flag with
a small Union Jack on it that represents Canada.
E|M|S
Have students look at street and satellite maps of New York City to see where Hassam was when he painted this
and how this view has changed. He was on a balcony at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Fifty-second Street looking north
toward Central Park.
E|M|S
Where are the shadows and what color are they? They are under projecting parts of the buildings and in the street,
and they are blue.
E|M|S
E|M|S
Which flag in the middle ground stands alone and is not overlapped by other flags? The American flag is surrounded
What does this suggest about how Hassam felt about his country? He thought America was unique and was proud
of his country.
M|S
What international event was happening when this was painted? It was painted during World War I.
Why were so many flags flying in New York City on this day? A month before this was painted, the United States officially
entered the war. On this day the British and French war commissioners were visiting New York.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
What do these flags flying together symbolize? They symbolize the fact that these three nations were standing together to fight
the war.
What elements do the flags have in common? They are all red, blue, and white.
M|S
Why did this painting become famous soon after it was completed?
Color reproductions of it were sold to benefit the war effort.
Why did Americans want copies of this painting?
For the beauty of the art and to show support for America and its allies as it joined them in the war.
CONNECTIONS
Impressionism
57
13 a
58
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students if they would recognize the image in this photograph as a bridge if it were not titled. Is this the shape they
visualize when they think of a bridge?
Most students will probably say it is not.
Why not?
Its from a different viewpoint than the one from which we usually see a bridge.
When most artists create a picture of a bridge, what view do they show of it?
Most photographs show a side view.
Where was the camera when this photograph was taken?
It was down low, looking up at one of the bridges two towers.
Show students other views of the Brooklyn Bridge so they will understand the unusual viewpoint of this photograph.
E
Have students locate the point to which all the cable lines seem to lead.
It is near the top center of the bridge tower.
Is this point centered in the photograph?
No, it isnt.
Is the balance in this picture symmetrical or asymmetrical?
It is asymmetrical.
M|S
Ask students if they have ever seen windows that were shaped like the arches on this bridge. Where did they see these?
These pointed arches resemble Gothic arches usually found in medieval churches and architecture. Students might have seen
pointed arches in a church.
Gothic cathedrals were the great engineering achievements of medieval Europe. Ask students what the presence
of Gothic arches in the Brooklyn Bridge might have symbolized.
The reference to Gothic architecture might have symbolized that the Brooklyn Bridge was an American marvel of engineering,
equivalent to the Gothic cathedrals of Europe.
INTERPRET
M|S
Evans wanted his photographs to show the national character of America. How does this photograph satisfy his aim?
The Brooklyn Bridge, in Americas largest city, was a structure that Americans were proud of. It was a modern feat of engineering
and architecture. Evanss photograph shows the beauty of a structure that thousands of Americans used every day.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Until the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, photography was primarily a means of documentation and was
not considered art. The photographer who took this picture considered photography to be an art form. Do you agree
with him? Use this photograph to support your reasoning.
S
Evans used a modern medium (photography) to create a modern image of a famous structure. When he had studied
art in Paris, he saw modern European art that featured abstract, simplified forms. How is this photograph like abstract
modern art?
Its unconventional viewpoint makes the shape of the bridge seem abstract and not easily recognizable. The stark dark
shape against the plain light background with the explosion of lines leading to it makes it seem like a contemporary
geometric composition.
CONNECTIONS
59
13b
Louis Comfort Tiffany, son of the founder of the New York City
jewelry store that still bears the family name, took no interest in
his fathers business. Instead, he trained as a painter in Paris, and
upon returning to New York decided to channel his talents into
the decorative arts. I believe there is more in it than in painting
pictures, he declared. By the 1890s, Tiffany was exploring the
possibilities of colored glass, a medium that had remained virtu
ally unchanged since the Middle Ages. In the late nineteenth
century, it was experiencing a revival, owing to the large num
ber of churches under construction in prospering American
cities. Gradually, stained glass made its way into secular settings,
with biblical subjects giving way to naturalistic motifs and wood
land themes. These luminous windows worked like landscape
paintings to introduce a sense of natural beauty into an urban
home. Their dense designs had the added advantage of block
ing views of dirty streets and back alleys that an ordinary
window might reveal.
Autumn Landscape was commissioned by real estate magnate
Loren Delbert Towle for his Gothic Revival mansion in Boston.
The window was meant to light the landing of a grand staircase,
and, by presenting a landscape view that receded into the dis
tance, it would offer the illusion of extending a necessarily
confined space. But even in domestic interiors, stained glass
never entirely lost its religious overtones. Tiffany divided this
60
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Where did Tiffany repeat colors in this window? Locate where he has used these hues.
Green: This color is found in the pond, in the left center tree, and in the gold trees on the right.
E|M|S
How would this window feel if you ran your fingers over its surface?
It would feel rough in some areas and smooth in others.
Where do you see rough textures? These are found in the trees and rocks.
Where do you see smooth textures? They are located in the pool and the light sky.
Tiffany used a variety of techniques to create special textures and colors of glass. Point out these areas.
E|M|S
E|M|S
Stained-glass windows are commonly seen in churches, but this window was created for a stairwell in a mans private
home. Why would someone rather have a stained-glass window in a house than clear glass?
The window is beautiful, and provides privacy or blocks unsightly views.
M|S
On which side of a house north, south, east, or west might you want to install this window, and why?
The south side would receive light all year; the west side, in the afternoon and evening; the east, in the morning; and the north
side would never receive direct light.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
How would this landscape make the space of a small stairwell feel larger?
Instead of a wall at the top of the stairs, the window would open up a deep vista and make the inside space look as if it continues
outside into the landscape.
S
Because the man who commissioned this window died before it was installed, it seemed like a memorial for him.
Why are autumn scenes and sunsets often featured in memorials to the dead?
Sometimes a year is a metaphor for a lifetime. The autumn of a persons life refers to a later stage of life and the sunset marks the end
of a day.
Describe the mood of this scene.
It is very serene and peaceful.
CONNECTIONS
Fitzgerald (secondary)
61
14 a
14-A Mary Cassatt (1844 1926), The Boating Party, 1893/1894. Oil on
canvas, 35716 x 4618 in. (90 x 117.3 cm.). Chester Dale Collection. Image
2006 Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
62
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Have students find the boats sail, the distant buildings, and the mans shoe.
E|M|S
Ask students to locate the horizon line. Where would a viewer have to be to see the people and boat from this angle?
A viewer would have to be located a little above them, perhaps on a dock or standing in the boat.
Where are the horizontal lines in this painting?
They occur on the shoreline and the yellow boat seats and supports.
Find the curved parallel lines of the boat and sail.
E|M|S
The curved lines of the boat, oar, and adults arms lead to the child.
E|M|S
E|M|S
Why does the man have his foot on the yellow boat support?
Students may say that he is getting ready to pull the oars or is steadying himself.
Describe the movement that the boat might make in the water.
It may be rocking and surging as the oars are pulled.
Have students imagine that the man and woman are talking to each other. What might they say? What do their faces
and bodies suggest about their relationship?
M|S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Are there any other ways in which the painting appears flat?
The boat looks tipped up and the water is painted the same way in the foreground and the background, so that the idea
of distance is reduced.
M|S
In what ways do forms seem to move toward the edges of the painting?
Students may give any number of examples: the woman leans left, the man leans right; the sail pulls to one corner, the oar points
to another; the edges of the boat bulge out toward the sides; the horizon nearly reaches the top; and the lower yellow boat seat
continues beyond the bottom.
What pulls the three figures together?
The white area of the boat surrounds them; they look at each other; and their hands are close.
What might this feeling of expansion and contraction have to do with the subject of the painting?
It echoes the rowing motion of the man. Students might also point out that it could also emphasize this brief and precious
moment when the man, woman, and child are intimately connected.
CONNECTIONS
Impressionism
63
14b
14-B Joseph Stella (1877 1946), Brooklyn Bridge, c. 1919 1920. Oil on
canvas, 84 x 76 in. (213.36 x 193.04 cm.). Yale University Art Gallery,
New Haven, Conn. Gift of Collection Socit Anonyme.
64
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Bridge cables: They run from the edges to the center of the composition. Note in particular the two curving pieces connected to the
bridge tower.
E|M|S
Are there any cars on the bridge? Perhaps. Some of the lights look like headlights.
E|M|S
Turn the painting upside down. Does the picture seem top heavy or bottom heavy?
It appears top heavy.
Why?
The shapes are larger on the top and the forms are thinner on the bottom. The cable lines also are directed to the bottom center
and seem to disappear.
Turn the painting right side up again. What are the thin upright forms at the top?
They are tall buildings: a city skyline.
Do some objects seem close and others far away? Why?
The thin white buildings seem farther away because they are placed higher in the painting and are smaller than the traffic light at the
bottom. The cables also get smaller and several angle toward each other as though they were parallel lines converging in the distance.
S
How does Stella suggest the complexity of the modern machine era? How has he indicated its dynamic movement?
He jumbles the thick and thin lines, showing bits and pieces of forms as though they are glimpsed only briefly; he blurs the colors
and adds diagonal and curving lines that suggest movement.
Have students identify some vertical lines in this painting. How do they affect the dynamics of the composition?
They give some order to the chaos.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Encourage students to imagine what Stella heard as he stood on this bridge at night.
The bridge is over a river. He might have heard tugboat horns, sirens, subway trains, and cars and trucks rumbling over the bridge.
M|S
CONNECTIONS
Washington Roebling
Science: civil engineering
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
65
15 a
66
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students how large the buildings seem in comparison with the man. They are huge.
This plant mass-produced automobiles. Raw materials and ores were transformed into cars. Long conveyor belts moved
materials within the factory. What structures in this view possibly house conveyor belts?
The long, thin white structure in front of the silos and other large buildings are possible sheds.
What does this painting say about the scale of American industry in 1930?
Sheeler was impressed with the massive scale of American industry and this plant.
INTERPRET
M|S
Have students visualize how industrial progress changed this view of the American landscape. Encourage them to imagine
how this scene looked before the canal, railroad, and factories were built.
The river might have curved and been lined with trees and plants. Smoke would not fill the sky.
Ask students if they think this painting seems more positive or negative regarding industrial development. How might
an average American in 1930 answer this question? How did factories like this affect the lives of American consumers?
Factories like this employed many people and the mass-produced goods they made were affordable to middle-class Americans.
Early twentieth-century Americans were proud of their countrys industrial development and appreciated the rise in their
standard of living made possible by mass production. Today, Americans are more sensitive to the effects of industrial development
on the environment.
CONNECTIONS
Science: machinery
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
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67
15 b
William Van Alen (1883 1954), The Chrysler Building, 42nd Street and Lexington
Avenue, New York, 1926 1930. Steel frame, brick, concrete, masonry, and metal
cladding, height 1046 ft. (318.82 m.).
15-B.1 right, The Chrysler Building, Manhattan, 1930. Photographic print.
Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C.
15-B.2 top left, detail. Steeple of the Chrysler Building. Photo
Company/zefa/CORBIS.
15-B.3 top center left, detail. Workers waterproofing Art Deco stainless steel
eagle ornament of sixty-first floor. Nathan Benn/CORBIS.
15-B.4 bottom center left, detail. Thirty-first floor decoration based on radiator
cap and hubcap designs. Photograph by Scott Murphy, Ambient Images, Inc.
To make the Chrysler Building distinct from others of its kind, Van
Alen chose motifs appropriate to the machine age, particularly
the automobile. The spires gleaming stainless steel cladding calls
to mind the polished chrome of a brand new car. Stylized
American eagle heads protrude from some corners of the build
ing in playful reference to the gargoyles on Gothic cathedrals.
Other corners are embellished with the winged forms of a
Chrysler radiator cap. One ornamental frieze incorporates a
band of hubcaps.
If the exterior ornament enhances the modernity of the sky
scraper, the interior was designed to recall the distant past, and
positions the Chrysler Building among the wonders of the
world. The most spectacular features of the grand lobby are the
elevator doors, adorned in brass and marquetry (decorative
inlays on a wood base) with the lotus flower motif. The discov
ery in 1922 of King Tutankhamens tomb had unleashed an
enthusiasm for archaic and exotic cultures, and the Chrysler
Building was designed at the height of this mania for all things
Egyptian. In addition to the lotus decoration, the public rooms
display a range of ancient Egyptian motifs intended to suggest
the buildings association with the great pyramids of the
pharaohs. The paintings on the lobby ceiling record the heroic
progress of the towers construction, as if the monument to
Chrysler had already assumed a place in history equal to that
of the Great Pyramids.
Both Chrysler and Van Alen were intent upon making this build
ing the tallest in the city, but toward the end of construction
there was uncertainty over whether it could indeed hold that
distinction. A rapidly rising office tower in Lower Manhattan
had already reached 840 feet, and its architect, Van Alens for
mer business partner, who acknowledged competition from the
Chrysler, pushed his building even higher by adding a sixty-foot
steel cap. Not to be outdone, Van Alen had his workers
secretly assemble a twenty-seven-ton steel tip, or vertex,
which was hoisted at the last minute to the top of the building
as a magnificent surprise to the city. With that, the Chrysler
not only exceeded the height of its Wall Street competition,
but surpassed even the Eiffel Tower in Paris. As it happened,
that hard-won prize would be lost within the year to the
Empire State Building, which is 202 feet higher.
William Van Alens reputation suffered after the completion of
his most famous building. Accused by Chrysler of taking bribes
from contractors, the architect never received full payment for
his work. The effects of the Depression on the building industry
further added to his woes. Today, Van Alen, with no major
studies dedicated to his work, is little known in the history of
architecture. On his death, the New York Times failed to even
publish an obituary.
15-B.5 bottom left, detail. Art Deco elevator doors at the Chrysler Building.
Nathan Benn/CORBIS.
68
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Ask students to locate triangles, squares, rectangles, and semi-circles on the Chrysler Building.
Semi-circles and triangles are near the top. Squares and rectangles form the windows. Some of the triangles are windows.
These geometric shapes were important to Art Deco-style architecture.
E|M|S
Focus students attention on the metal sculpture detail in 15-B.4. What does it look like?
What might it symbolize?
It might suggest an animal or the winged cap of the ancient Roman god, Mercury. It also suggests speed.
Why does this look man-made rather than like a natural object?
The shapes have been simplified and streamlined into geometric forms.
Notice that this sculpture stands on a round base. Have students locate these large replicas of a 1929 Chrysler radiator
cap on the corners of the thirty-first floor.
E|M|S
Call students attention to a worker waterproofing a detail ornament (15-B.3). Ask students what animal the
ornament represents.
It represents an eagle.
Have students find the ornaments that project outward like medieval gargoyles above the sixty-first floor.
E|M|S
As students look at the elevator doors (lower left detail), ask them to find the stylized flower and plant shapes. The large
central flower is a lotus blossom, an important symbol in ancient Egypt. Notice how arcs divide this design into geometric
shapes. Ask students to identify another vertical series of arcs on this building.
The sunburst arches at the top of the building are a series of arcs similar to this.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Why did corporations and architects race to build tall skyscrapers in the 1920s?
The economy was flourishing, corporations needed more office space, and Chrysler wanted to own the tallest building
in New York City.
Why do you think the spire was added to the top?
It was added to make it taller than all the other buildings.
What happened in 1929 to halt this building spree?
The stock market crashed.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
New York City building codes required that tall buildings such as this step back their upper stories. What were
the benefits of making tall buildings smaller near the top?
This allowed more light and air to reach the streets and made the buildings look even taller than they really were.
CONNECTIONS
69
16 a
Like the house, the site once may have been more attractive.
The tall, hooded windows must have overlooked a landscape;
the double veranda and tower were presumably positioned to
70
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
M|S
Ask students to describe the mood of this painting. Students may see it as lonely, empty, bleak, or barren. Ask them
to explain why it seems like this.
The dull gray color of the house, its deep shadow, windows with nothing visible inside, empty porch, and lack of vegetation all contribute
to the lonely mood. Even the railroad track separates the viewers from the house, hiding the steps to the porch and making it seem
even less accessible.
E|M|S
Where are the darkest shadows? They are on the right, under the porch overhang.
E|M|S
Have students describe the architecture of this house. What shape are its windows and roof?
It is of ornate Victorian style with arched windows; the house has porches, brick chimneys, and an extremely steep, curved
Mansard roof. The main body is three stories tall and the tower section has four stories.
S
Ask students how a real estate agent might write an ad for this house. What are its strong features? How could its location be
described positively?
INTERPRET
E|M
Ask students to imagine how this scene would change if a train went by on this track.
It would be noisy and the house might shake. At night, lights would shine in the windows.
E|M|S
Ask students what they think was built first, the house or the railroad track. Ask them to explain why they think this.
Because this is an old-fashioned house with dated architectural features and it is too close to the railroad track, the track was
probably laid after the house.
M|S
Have students think of a building in their community that seems old, outdated, and ugly, but not so old that it is
a treasured antique. Explain that this is how Hopper probably felt about this house. Its Victorian architecture was
dated and out of style in 1925, but today that style has regained some of its popularity.
S
CONNECTIONS
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Wilder (middle)
71
16 b
72
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Have students locate the balconies, the man on the lower balcony, a vertical column of stone, and a vertical area
of glass windows.
E|M|S
Ask which exterior materials on this house are natural and which are man-made.
The stone is natural, and the concrete, glass, and metal are man-made.
Notice how the textures of these materials contrast with each other. Describe the textures of the different parts
of the house.
The glass is smooth and shiny and the rock is very rough. The concrete is gritty, but not as rough as the stone, nor as smooth
as the glass.
M|S
To understand how cantilevers are balanced, have each student set a pencil on the desk so that the point extends over the
edge of the desk. They should gradually push the pencil toward the edge of the desk until it begins to fall. Then have them
put a weight such as a book or their finger on the eraser end of the pencil. How much farther can they extend the pencil
over the edge with the weight on one end?
Ask students what parts of Fallingwater are cantilevered.
The horizontal balconies are cantilevered.
What part of the building appears to create the weight to hold them in place?
The vertical stone column fulfills this function.
M|S
E|M|S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Why might a city dweller enjoy this house? Imagine being on one of the balconies. What would you hear?
A retreat in the country would be a change of scenery for those who live in a city. From the balcony you hear the sound
of the waterfall.
E|M|S
The Kaufmanns wanted a vacation home on their land. Why was the location that Wright chose for the house a surprise
to them? Where would most architects probably have located the house to take advantage of the natural waterfall?
Most architects would locate the house to have a view of the waterfall instead of placing the house on top of it.
S
How is Fallingwater like a piece of contemporary abstract art from the twentieth century?
Its been simplified into basic, essential shapes without added ornamentation.
CONNECTIONS
Modernism
73
17a
74
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Lawrence painted all the panels for The Migration Series at the same time, one color at a time. How did this affect the
way the series looks?
Because the same colors are on each panel, the panels seem unified.
Have students discuss where Lawrence repeated colors in this painting.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Ask students who was migrating in The Migration Series. Where were they going?
Ask students how Lawrence learned about scenes from the migration.
He listened to his family and friends stories, and he researched historical events from this time period in the Harlem branch of
the New York Public Library.
M|S
Help students find Harlem on a New York City street map. (It is just north of Central Park.) Ask students why Jacob
Lawrences art was first exhibited in Harlem.
He lived in Harlem, where many African Americans lived.
What was significant about Lawrence being asked to exhibit his art in a downtown gallery?
Previously, African American artists had been excluded from downtown galleries.
Have students compare Jacob Lawrences image of a migrant mother with Dorothea Langes photograph Migrant Mother
(18-B). What does each artist emphasize about the lives of these women?
Lawrence emphasizes the hard manual labor that this woman is doing, while Lange emphasizes a mothers care and concern for
her children.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask students why Lawrence was like a West African griot. (A griot is a professional poet who perpetuates history and
genealogy through tales and music.)
Like a griot, Lawrence tells the story of a people through art.
CONNECTIONS
75
17 b
17-B Romare Bearden (c. 19111988), The Dove, 1964. Cut-and-pasted photorepro
ductions and papers, gouache, pencil, and colored pencil on cardboard, 1338 x 1834 in.
(34 x 47.6 cm.). Blanchette Rockefeller Fund (377.1971). The Museum of Modern
Art, New York. Digital Image The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA /
Art Resource, New York. Art Estate of Romare Bearden Trusts / Licensed by
VAGA, New York.
76
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
E|M|S
Bearden rearranges pieces of magazine and newspaper images to create new messages. Locate a figure. What is this
figure doing? Find people looking out windows, sitting on steps, and walking on the street.
Most of the figures are composed of more than one cut-out. In the center a man holding a cigarette sits on steps. Another man,
wearing a white hat low over his eyes, walks down the sidewalk. To the left of the black cat, a woman leans on her elbows and looks out a
basement window.
M|S
Ask the students to consider how we perceive our environment. For example, when were sitting in a room or walking
down the street, do we see everything at once in equal detail?
We see the scene in fragments.
How is Beardens collage like the way we take in a scene in real life?
We see a complicated or active scene piece by piece over time.
INTERPRET
M|S
Bearden grew up in New York City during the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, and he loved jazz. How is his collage
like jazz?
Both encourage the artist to improvise and try new arrangements. The fragmented style is like the upbeat syncopation of jazz
rhythms, which opens up a musical composition.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
Bearden wanted to show African American life in America from an African American point of view. Ask students to explain
how well they think he accomplishes that in this collage.
CONNECTIONS
geography
T H E D OV E , 1 9 6 4 , ROMARE BEARDEN [c. 19111988]
77
18 a
18-A Thomas Hart Benton (18891975), The Sources of Country Music, 1975.
Acrylic on canvas, 72 x 120 in. (182.9 x 304.8 cm.). The Country Music Hall of
Fame and Museum, Nashville, Tenn. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
is operated by the Country Music Foundation, Inc., a Section 501(c)(3) not-for
profit educational organization chartered by the State of Tennessee in 1964.
78
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Have students find five scenes in this painting that show regional musicians. These represent the roots of American
country music. Can students identify what type of music each of these represents?
Church and choir music: Three women with a choir director (upper left) are representative of church and choir music.
Appalachian singers: Two barefoot women playing the dulcimer (left) represent Appalachia.
Barn dance: Two fiddlers and dancers (center) are representative of barn dancing.
Singing cowboy: A man with a guitar (right) represents the singing cowboy.
African American music of the Deep South: The man with a banjo and a group of women on the distant riverbank
M|S
How did Benton join these different scenes into one unified composition?
He overlapped forms, used the same painting style throughout, repeated colors, and made most of the figures face in toward
the center of the painting. Just as all these musical influences came together in American country music, they hold together
as a unified composition in this painting.
E|M|S
How did Benton create a sense of rhythm and movement throughout this composition?
Most of the vertical lines and bodies slant to the right, creating visual movement in that direction. The train leans forward
as it speeds to the right. Even the telephone poles seem to sway.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
What things and people are making music and sound in this scene?
The choir, Appalachian women, banjo player, and cowboy are singing. The train rumbles and whistles, the riverboat whistles,
and dancers stamp their feet on a wooden floor. The dulcimer, fiddles, banjo, and guitar are all being played.
Benton wanted all the musicians to play the same note and sing their varied music in tune. Do you think this painting
seems like noisy confusion or are all the parts in harmony?
M|S
Why did Benton include in the painting a homage to Tex Ritter, the singing cowboy?
Ritter helped persuade Benton to paint this picture but died before it was completed.
Why did Benton not sign this painting?
He died before he completed it.
Before he died, Benton was trying to decide whether he should repaint the train. Why do you think he wanted
to do this?
CONNECTIONS
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Arts: Regionalism
79
80
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students what they first notice when they look at this photograph.
They probably will notice the womans face.
Discuss why our attention is drawn to this part of the image.
Light shines on the womans face, her right arm and hand lead toward her face, and the children turn toward her.
E|M|S
Discuss with students how Lange focuses our attention on just the woman and her children. What doesnt she show?
What is in the background?
As Lange moved closer and closer to this scene, snapping photographs as she approached, she gradually cropped out the
background the tent that the woman was sitting in front of. In this close-up, the woman and her children fill the composition.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Have students describe the expression on this womans face. How does she feel? What might she be thinking?
She seems to stare out into space with a furrowed brow and down-turned mouth. She appears worried and tired. Perhaps
shes wondering what to do next or where they will find food.
E|M|S
Ask students to speculate on why the children turned their heads away from the camera.
Maybe they were shy, or maybe they were afraid of a strange woman with a camera and are seeking their mothers comfort.
Lange could also have posed them this way for greater effect.
E|M|S
Ask students why the Resettlement Administration may have wanted to document the effects of the Great Depression
in photographs rather than just words and statistics.
Photographs can be powerful eyewitness accounts that allow people to quickly grasp the meaning and emotion of an event.
S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Explain that this photograph was published in newspapers. Ask students how they think Americans responded to it.
They were outraged that this should happen in America; the federal government responded by shipping thousands of pounds
of food to feed the migrants.
CONNECTIONS
81
82
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
How do you know? His hair is dark rather than gray and his face isnt as wrinkled as the others.
Describe the reaction of the other people in this scene to the speaker.
E|M|S
Encourage students to imagine what the speaker might be saying. Discuss recent town meetings or hearings
in your community where citizens voiced their opinions.
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
M|S
CONNECTIONS
83
19 b
84
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M|S
Ask students to locate two flags. Why does the American flag play a prominent role in this march?
These people were marching for equal voting rights for African Americans in the United States. As citizens of the United States,
African Americans wanted the same rights and opportunities as other Americans.
M|S
Encourage students to imagine where the photographer placed himself in order to take this picture.
He was slightly below the marchers, looking up at them.
Ask what is in the background behind the marchers.
A light sky with dark clouds is above the marchers.
Ask students how this viewpoint emphasizes the message and drama of the scene.
Karales makes the marchers look larger by tilting the camera up and creates drama by silhouetting the figures against the sky.
Discuss how this image might lose some of its impact if buildings and trees were included in the background.
M|S
How does the photographer suggest that there are many people participating in this march?
The camera angle exaggerates the perspective, making the line look as if it stretches into a great distance; we cant see the end
of the line because it continues behind the hill.
INTERPRET
E|M|S
What do the outstretched legs and thrust-back shoulders of the three leading marchers suggest about their attitude?
They seem young, determined, and strong.
E|M|S
Call students attention to the legs of the leading marchers. Apparently they are marching together in unison. What might
they be doing to keep this same rhythm and beat?
They may have been singing and marching to the rhythm of music.
You may wish to play or have students sing We Shall Overcome, a song popular during the civil rights movement.
E|M|S
Have students discuss why the publication of this photograph and others like it in magazines and newspapers helped the
movement for civil rights in the United States.
CONNECTIONS
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
85
20a
Cityscape I, 1963
Although often derided by those who embraced the native ten
dency toward realism, abstract painting was avidly pursued by
artists after World War II. In the hands of talented painters such
as Jackson Pollack, Robert Motherwell, and Richard Diebenkorn,
abstract art displayed a robust energy and creative dynamism
that was equal to Americas emergence as the new major
player on the international stage. Unlike the art produced under
fascist or communist regimes, which tended to be ideological
and narrowly didactic, abstract art focused on art itself and the
pleasure of its creation. Richard Diebenkorn was a painter who
moved from abstraction to figurative painting and then back
again. If his work has any theme it is the light and atmosphere
of the West Coast. As such, it touches the heart of landscape
painting in America.
In Richard Diebenkorns Cityscape I, the land and buildings are
infused by the strong light of Northern California. The artist
captured the climate of San Francisco by delicately combining
shades of green, brown, gray, blue, and pink, and arranging
them in patches that represent the architecture and streets of
his city. Unlike The Oxbow by Thomas Cole (see 5-A), there is
86
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
Ask students to identify triangles, trapezoids, and rectangles in this cityscape. They are in the fields, buildings, and shadows.
Have students locate trees, windows, and a flight of steps in this scene. Trees are near the top, windows are in a white
building on the left, and steps are near the lower left.
E
Have students view a landscape from an upper story or playground climbing structure. Ask them to compare this
elevated view with how the scene looks when they stand on the ground. What do they notice from the higher view that
they would not see if they were lower?
Where might Diebenkorn have been when he saw the cityscape for this painting? He could have been in a tall building, on
a high hill, or in a low-flying airplane. (He was impressed with the view from a plane when he was a young man.)
E|M|S
Ask students how the two sides of the road in Diebenkorns painting differ. Which side is man-made and which
is undeveloped? The left side is filled with gray and white buildings while the right side is undeveloped fields of green and gold.
E|M|S
Ask students to describe the land in this scene. Its hilly with green fields and gold earth.
Show students photographs of San Franciscos hills to see the landscape that inspired this painting. Notice how steep
E|M|S
Ask how Diebenkorn created a sense of depth in this scene. Distant shadows and buildings are lighter and higher in the
composition than those close to us.
E|M|S
Ask students if this painting is more like life (realistic) or simplified (abstract). It is more abstract.
Ask how the buildings and fields are different from what they might actually see. They are basic shapes and have very few details.
By painting this scene abstractly rather than realistically, what message has Diebenkorn shown in this painting? He focuses
M|S
Tell students to follow the road back into this scene. How does Diebenkorn slow their eye movement through this
landscape? Horizontal shadow and light shapes slow the visual movement.
M|S
Have students compare Diebenkorns Cityscape 1 with Edward Hoppers House by the Railroad. How are they similar?
In both paintings light and shadow are extremely important. Both show buildings, but not people.
How are they different? Hoppers painting is much more detailed and realistic. Land fills most of Diebenkorns composition.
The sky and building are much more important in Hoppers. We look down on Diebenkorns landscape from a birds-eye viewpoint,
Compare their moods. Because of the bright, light colors, Diebenkorns seems more upbeat and cheerful.
INTERPRET
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
Ask students what time of day it might be in Diebenkorns painting. Why do they think this?
The long shadows suggest that its early morning or late afternoon.
M|S
Ask what factors affect the color and lightness of an actual landscape.
The weather, sunlight, and humidity or pollution in the air all affect how much light shines on a scene.
Ask students to describe the weather and air quality of this scene. Its clear and dry.
S
Ask students why abstract painting was popular in the United States after World War II. Abstract art, with its energy
and creativity, complemented the dynamism of the United States as it became a world leader. Also, abstract art demonstrated
that in a democracy artists could express themselves freely, unlike artists in totalitarian countries who had to create art supporting
government ideologies.
CONNECTIONS
suburbanization
McCarthy
87
20b
Like Puryears sculpture, the legacy of the man for whom it was
named is open to interpretation. Booker T. Washington, an
eminent but controversial leader of the African American com
munity, was born into slavery in the Piedmont region of Virginia
around 1856. At the age of twenty-five he rose to prominence
as the founder and first president of Tuskegee Institute in
Alabama. In the years following Reconstruction, the promised
gains for African Americans were slipping away, and as
an educator, Washington insisted that blacks be skilled both voca
tionally and intellectually: When the student is through with his
course of training, he [should go] out feeling that it is just as
honorable to labor with the hands as with the head. At
Tuskegee, the curriculum was founded on the tenet that work
in all its manifestations was dignified and beautiful.
Under Washingtons guidance, Tuskegee became a successful
and respected institution, and Washington himself was revered
by many blacks and whites. However, his stand on civil rights
was highly criticized by other African American leaders, such as
W. E. B. DuBois, as being subservient. Washington thought that
blacks need not campaign for the vote. The goal as he saw it
was to establish economic independence before demanding
civic equality, even if that meant using white assistance. He
drew on his own life experience, recounted in his autobiogra
phy Up from Slavery, to exemplify his conviction that hard work
would be sufficient to propel African Americans to success
and acceptance. Although Washington quietly supported anti
segregation, he did not speak out openly against racism until
the end of his life.
Puryear has used the concept of a ladder not easily ascended
more than once most spectacularly in an eighty-five-foot
cedar and muslin spiral staircase created in a Paris church in
1998 1999. This artistic metaphor dovetails seamlessly with
the contradictions inherent in the often contentious legacy of
Booker T. Washington. The association of ladders with ambi
tion, transcendence, danger, faith, and salvation, deeply woven
into the Judeo-Christian tradition, was certainly a vital part of
the educational leaders life. The title of Washingtons autobiog
raphy Up from Slavery is a direct reference to an ascent to
a richer existence, both materially and psychologically. The
spiritual We Are Climbing Jacobs Ladder was one of
Washingtons favorites (it was also sung by the Freedom
Marchers from Selma to Birmingham, see 19-B).
88
DESCRIBE AND
ANALYZE
E|M
Have students describe the side rails and rungs of this ladder.
The side rails are crooked, like the organic shape of the trees from which they were made. The rungs are thicker in the middle.
The whole ladder is polished and assembled with fine craftsmanship.
E|M|S
Ask students what illusion Puryear creates by making the ladder narrower at the top than bottom.
It makes it seem even taller than it is.
Remind them of the African American spiritual We Are Climbing Jacobs Ladder. Does this ladder seem tall enough to
reach to the heavens?
INTERPRET
E|M|S
Ask students if they think the ladder would be difficult to climb and why.
It would be very difficult because it is long and curving and it gets very narrow at the top.
E|M|S
Discuss with students what ladders can symbolize. Remind them of phrases like climbing the ladder to success and
getting to the top. Call attention to the title of this sculpture, Ladder for Booker T. Washington. The title of Washingtons
autobiography was Up from Slavery. Ask why this ladder is an appropriate symbol for this title. (Students should
understand that the climb from slavery to attaining equal civil rights was as difficult as it would be to climb this ladder.)
M|S
How does the fine craftsmanship of this ladder represent some of Washingtons beliefs?
In addition to intellectual skills, Washington believed that students should learn manual skills, like the woodworking represented
by this ladder, in order to support themselves.
M|S
teaching activities
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
E = ELEMENTARY| M = MIDDLE |S = SECONDARY
CONNECTIONS
Washington; W. E. B. DuBois
Civics: Fifteenth Amendment; Voting
Rights Act of 1965
L A D D E R F O R B O O K E R T. WA S H I N GT O N , 19 9 6 , M A RT I N P U RY E A R [1941]
89
selected bibliography
GENERAL SOURCES
Baigell, Matthew. A Concise History of American Painting and
Sculpture. New York: Harper & Row, 1984.
Brown, Milton W. American Art to 1900: Painting, Sculpture,
Architecture. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1977.
Brown, Milton W., Sam Hunter, John Jacobs, Naomi
Rosenblum, and David M. Sokol. American Art: Painting,
Sculpture, Decorative Arts, Photography. New York:
Harry N. Abrams, 1979.
Berlo, Janet C., and Ruth B. Phillips. Native North American Art.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
Campbell, Emory Shaw. Gullah Cultural Legacies. Hilton Head,
SC: Gullah Heritage Consulting Services, 2002.
Cohodas, Marvin. Degikup: Washoe Fancy Basketry, 18951935.
Vancouver: Fine Arts Gallery of the University of British
Columbia, 1979.
Crown, Patricia L., and W. H. Wills. Modifying Pottery and
Kivas at Chaco: Pentimento, Restoration, or Renewal? American
Antiquity 68, no. 3 (2003): 511532.
93
PICTURING AMERICA
Parry, Ellwood C., III. The Art of Thomas Cole, Ambition and
Imagination. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1988.
ELECTION, 1852
Anderson, Nancy K., and Linda S. Ferber. Albert Bierstadt: Art &
Enterprise. New York: Hudson Hills Press, in association with the
Brooklyn Museum, 1990.
Marcus, Lois Goldreich. The Shaw Memorial by Augustus SaintGaudens: A History Painting in Bronze. Winterthur Portfolio 14,
no. 1 (1979): 123.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
95
OF A BOY, 1890
96
1893/1894
PICTURING AMERICA
19191920
1930
1936
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
97
98
PICTURING AMERICA
art index
ARTISTS
GENRE
INDEXES
MEDIA
Architecture, bridge: 13-A Evans;
14-B Stella; commercial: 15-B Van
Alen; domestic: 16-A Hopper;16-B
Wright; government: 7-A Ohio State
Capitol; religious: 1-B Mission
Concepcin; 3-A Wood
Basketry: 1-A Keyser, Toolak, Johnson
Collage: 17-B Bearden
Drawing: 8-B Black Hawk
Interior design: 11-B Whistler
Painting, fresco:1B.3; oil: 2-A Copley;
3-A Wood; 3-B Stuart; 4-A Leutze;
99
HISTORY
TIME PERIODS, CULTURES, AND EVENTS:
100
PICTURING AMERICA
INDEXES
101
CIVICS
American flag: 4-A, 12-B, 19-B
Bill of Rights: 19-A
Brandenburg v. Ohio: 19-A
Declaration of Independence: 4-A, 4-B
Electoral process: 7-B
Founding Fathers: 3-B, 4-A, 4-B
Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments: 7-B, 20-B
Indian Resettlement (Removal) Act: 6-B, 8-B
Government: federal: 3-B, 12-B, 18-B, 19-A, 19-B;
local: 19-A; state: 7-A
New York Times Co. v. United States: 19-A
New Deal: 18-B
Nineteenth Amendment: 14-A
Stromberg v. California: 19-A
Substantive due process: 15-A
U.S. Constitution: 3-B, 7-B, 19-A, 19-B
U.S. Supreme Court: 19-A
Voting: 7-B, 19-B
Voting Rights Act of 1965: 7-B, 19-B, 20-B
Whigs v. Tories: 2-A
Whitney v. California: 19-A
Appalachia: 18-A
ECONOMICS
Agriculture: 1-A
Mercantilism: 2-B
Capitalism: 12-A, 15-A, 15-B
Cottage industries: 1-A
Cotton gin: 10-B
Hunter-gatherers: 1-A
Industrial expansion: 15-A
Labor unions: 15-A
Nomads: see Hunter-gatherers
Trade: 2-B
INDUSTRIES:
GEOGRAPHY
Alaska: 1-A
Allied Powers, World War I (France, Russia, United Kingdom,
Italy, United States): 12-B
America, colonial and Revolutionary: 3-A, 3-B
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MATHEMATICS
General: 3-A, 10-B, 20-B
Geometry: 3-A, 10-B, 16-B
MUSIC
POETRY AND PLAYS
Blues: 17-B
Dixie: 9-A
Gospel: 18-A
Historical instruments: 18-A
Inspirational: 19-B
Jazz: 17-B
Spirituals, general: 18-A, 20-B; We Are Climbing Jacobs
Ladder: 20-B
Star Spangled Banner: 12-B
We Shall Overcome: 19-B. 20-B
SCIENCE
Anatomy: 11-A
Engineering, general: 15-A, 16-B; civil: 13-A, 14-B
Glassmaking: 13-B
Life Sciences: 6-A
Machinery: 15-A
Metallurgy: 2-B, 15-B
Physics: 16-B
Transportation, advances in: 16-A
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