Monday, November 14, 2016

STRANGE FRUIT-THE BEGINNINGS OF MY RESEARCH PROJECT-C32325-An Anthropology and Art Project

I was in NYC last week and saw a powerful exhibit at The Holocaust Museum and decided... especially since I am Jewish, to create an art work informed by this song,Strange fruit which was first a poem by Abel Meerpol,1937.
It was sung first by Billie Holiday and then by Nina Simone(see links below to hear the song).I took photos of lines and cracks and debris in the train stations in NYC.(see images below)





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8Lq_yasEgo



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ZyuULy9zs

"TO WATCH A MAN HANG FROM A TREE AND CALL HIM "STRANGE FRUIT"....THIS IS THE UGLIEST SONG"Nina Simone

With the Black and White issues today and in lines with BLACK LIVES MATTER, I decided to create an artwork informed by all of this....this is the beginnings.......stay tuned for more as I begin to make the art...as a side note..whenever I decide to make an art work, I choose something which gives me "that lump in my throat"feeling as Robert Frost once said.Here I go again.....C32325 may be the title I use as that is his number on the tree....or simply the title "strange fruit",which is the title of the poem and song and how they compared hanging bodies to strange fruit from a poplar tree.





















100 years ago, an act of anti-Semitic violence that changed America: The lynching of Leo Frank
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A stain on American history
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, August 17, 2015, 4:33 PM
In the early hours of Aug. 17, 1915, a 31-year-old man took his last breath as the table beneath him was kicked out and the short rope hung from an oak branch snapped his neck.
The man hanging from that tree was an American Jew by the name of Leo Frank. Although Frank was the only Jew in the history of America lynched by a mob, his death had a profound and lasting impact on American Jewry.
Frank, a superintendent at a pencil factory in Atlanta, had been sentenced to death on questionable evidence for murdering 13-year-old Mary Phagan in 1913. She had worked at the factory. His trial was a foregone conclusion; Frank had already been convicted in the court of public opinion.
The Northern Jew was the obvious target of the people’s rage. A hate-infused trial ensued, and Frank was portrayed as the insidious Jewish infiltrator, taking what he pleased.
A conviction quickly came, and Frank was sentenced to death.
As he went from appeal to appeal, the case against him began to fall apart. Even some of his accusers conceded that Frank had not murdered Mary Phagan. After his appeals had been rejected by the Supreme Courts of both Georgia and the United States, Georgia Gov. John M. Slaton investigated the body of evidence and, taking a bold stand, commuted Leo Frank’s sentence to life in prison. Slaton did not believe the accused had been guilty of the crime.
But this did not sit well with a community longing for justice but blinded by bigoted rage. After he arrived at the Milledgeville State Penitentiary, Frank’s throat was slit by a fellow prisoner. He survived this attempt on his life, yet the wound had barely healed when on Aug. 16, 1915m a well-oiled mob of 25 rolled up to the prison gates, removed Frank in less than a half hour without firing a shot, and brought him to Marietta, Mary Phagan’s hometown.
After being badly beaten, he was hanged from a tree at 7 a.m.
With so many tragedies that have befallen the Jewish people, why should we take time to remember this singular incident? Because Leo Frank’s death was the functional equivalent of state-sponsored murder.
Although the governor had commuted the sentence, prominent Georgians, including judges and other state officials, plotted and carried out a seamless abduction and lynching. A huge crowd watched the lynching, which was supervised by a well-known superior court judge. That very same day the perpetrators of the crime were absolved of any wrongdoing by a grand jury, although they were all well known locally.
Several photographs were taken of the hanging, which were published and sold as postcards in local stores, along with pieces of the rope used to hang Frank, his nightshirt, and branches from the tree.
In the aftermath of the murder, fear spread among Southern Jews. Until then, they had found themselves quite comfortable and safe in their genteel communities. They owned businesses, were respected by their neighbors, and even held government office.

While Frank’s death may have been the only anti-Semitic lynching in America, there were of course thousands of African Americans who were cruelly murdered in this fashion. We cannot forget these poor souls either. We must acknowledge and learn from this dark chapter of our history.

Artist,Ken Gonzalez did a series called Hang Trees(see link below)about the California lynchings.

The collage/sketches made to inform the large wall piece I created are below:

Keep in  mind I was thinking of rope,hanging,head down,hands and feet positioned and the cracks and detritus of those ancient NYC city subways.



when i self harm

the girl in  pieces

as the world gets darker













White Blindness

Author of the book ,Through Our Own Eyes, Bertold Brecht 1956

"And I always thought: the very simplest words must be enough.When I say what things are like,everyone's heart must be torn to shreds.That you'll go down if you don't stand up for yourself.Surely you see that."

I can easily relate to these words in my own life and choose to express this ideology through the work I create.
I hope the art I am making will embrace these ideas and express emotive rich surfaces ,viseral and intimate yet strong and powerful.

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