Description: photomontage
Label Text: Curatorial Fellowship exhibition: What's So Funny: How Humor Makes Us Think, March 21 - April 28, 2019 Although most known for her portrayal of dancers, Morgan also pushed the limits of photography with her work in photomontage and light drawings. Here, a portrait of newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst is superimposed, in the form of an octopus, over a crowd of workers. Initially published in New Masses, a left-wing magazine in the early twentieth century, this photomontage and its many-tentacled Hearst acts as “a symbol of corporate greed and corruption” which seems to attack the workers. The dark and slithering impact of Hearst, whose support of Hitler and Mussolini was known, and his “sensationalist news empire” is evident in this work. - Kayla Peterson (M.A. Art History, 2020) and Siyu Shen (M.A. Art History, 2020) Credit: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/294866
Tags: photography; collages; black and white; people; figures; crowds; faces; male; workers; social commentary Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=UM+2011.5.22 |