Grant Wood
The best possible introduction to Grant Wood's American Gothic is the fact that it was listed by The Washington Times as one of the most important icons of the 1930's in America: "Hardship at home and conflict abroad...the Great Depression. Dust bowl farmers sought a harvest of hope...labored to lift the countries spirits...Pitchfork Picture: Grant Wood paints American Gothic." (The Washington Times, May, 1999)
Created in 1930, American Gothic captured the public imagination and shifted the attention of American painting from the cosmopolitan to the rural: "Grant Wood's 'American Gothic' caused a stir in 1930 when it was exhibited for the first time at the Art Institute of Chicago.... Newspapers across the country carried the story and the painting of a farm couple posed before a white house...." (The Art Institute of Chicago Web site)
Why did a painting of an ordinary farm couple in front of a gothic house set America and the art world on fire? To answer this question, it would be important to study the painting in question more closely. Oil on beaverboard, American Gothic got its inspiration and name from a Gothic cottage in the small Southern Iowa town of Eldon. The Gothic Revival style is indicated both by the upper window designed to resemble a medieval pointed arch as well as the aesthetic emphasis on the verticality in height and features of the farmer and his unmarried daughter. Critics have also interpreted the highly detailed style and rigid frontal arrangement of the figures as having drawn its inspiration from Northern Renaissance art, which Wood had studied in Europe (The Art Institute of Chicago Web site).
But it wasn't so much the technique and style but the representation of rural American subjects that made the American Gothic a subject of controversy. While many interpreted Wood's depiction of the farm couple as a glorification of the moral virtue of rural America, there were some who felt that it satirized the narrow-mindedness and repression typical of Midwestern culture: "...those who believed the painting was a celebration of 'American' values...those who saw it as a satiric critique of the selfsame thing." (Sister Wendy's Web page)
Wood himself, in a letter to Mrs. Sudduth, described his vision of American Gothic as small town, self-righteous folks, with a significant relationship to the false Gothic house and its ecclesiastical window: "Incidentally, I did not intend this painting as a satire. I endeavored to paint these people as they existed for me in the life I knew. It seems to me that they are basically solid and good people. But I don't feel that one gets at this fact better by denying their faults and fanaticism" (CampSilos Web site).
Perhaps it was the stark realism of his portrait that appealed to the American public at a time when the Great Depression and the growing unrest in Europe had resulted in the development of a national sentiment, which sought an idealized vision of the American way of life: "...that farmer, actually Wood's dentist, stands with calm menace, defending the home that immediately...became an icon for middle America with all its positive and negative connotations." (University of Virginia Web site)
The growing nationalist sentiment of the time had also led to cultural changes that may have impacted the response to American Gothic: "Between the First and Second World Wars, many American artists rejected European influences on art and attempted to establish a truly American form of art...known as Regionalism." (Arts & Activities, Vol. 129, March 2001).
Regionalist art expressed itself through local surroundings and developed at a time when the prevailing trend was one of realism. While Edward Hopper used techniques of realism to paint statements about poverty and hardship, questioning America's ideals and values; the Regionalist triumvirate of John Steuart Curry, Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood depicted rural life in America in the tradition of European masters, and thereby offered the comfort of a known way of life.
The popularity and mesmerizing appeal of American Gothic can, thus, be traced to the themes of realism in the works of other painters as well. Curry, for instance, painted representations of families surviving natural disaster, probably inspired by the dust bowl and farm closures that drove the Midwest into economic turmoil (Tornado Over Kansas; The Mississippi). Benton addressed the relationship between the government and farmers in Politics and Agriculture; racism in A Lynching; and sexuality in Hollywood...
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