자유민

1863, cast 1891
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 762
워드는 1862년 9월 22일에 공포된 에이브러햄 링컨의 예비 노예 해방령의 영향을 따라 앉아 있는 흑인 미국인의 조각상 모형을 제작하였습니다. 워드의 폐지론자 견해를 선언하는 이 조각상은 그 시대의 주요한 정치적, 도덕적 주제에 대해 신랄한 논평을 제공합니다. 부러진 예속의 족쇠가 전 노예의 왼손목과 오른손에 보입니다. 19세기의 주요 현실주의 조각가 워드는 모델의 근육질 주인공의 해부와 관상을 정확하게 묘사하였습니다. 워드는 이 인물에 대한 감동을 자신의 오하이오 고향의 거주민에게서 받았거나 1858년 남부로 여행했을 당시에 얻었을 수 있습니다.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 제목: 자유민
  • 아티스트: 존 퀸시 애덤스 워드 미국, 1830– 1910년
  • 연대: 1863년, 1891년 주조
  • 재료: 청동
  • 크기: 49.5 × 37.5 × 24.8cm
  • 크레디트 라인: 조부 찰스 롤린슨 램을 기리며 찰스 안토니 램 및 바레아 램 실리 기증, 1979
  • 작품 번호: 1979.394
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

다음에서만 사용 가능: English
Cover Image for 4032. John Quincy Adams Ward, *The Freedman*, 1863

4032. John Quincy Adams Ward, The Freedman, 1863

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NARRATOR: When Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, it inspired this sculpture of a formerly enslaved Black man holding broken manacles and looking up, toward a new future.

HUGH HAYDEN: I’m struck by his sense of agency, and that he’s somewhat in motion. Is he sitting down, or is he getting up? I think often the museum text will say he's getting up, but I also like the idea that he's sitting down to rest.

NARRATOR: This sculpture inspired artist Hugh Hayden to respond–this time exploring the ongoing resonance of issues concerning enslavement and its legacy.

HUGH HAYDEN: Within my greater body of work, I explore forms and ideas related to inhabiting the American dream, often using wood furniture, whether it’s an Adirondack chair which might denote leisure and rest, or school desks that might suggest education, and upward mobility.

I’ve made another sculpture based off of a 3D scan of this work where it’s the same man except we’ve given him contemporary clothing like cargo shorts and a button up fishing shirt and flip flops, and the stump has been remade as a wooden Adirondack chair. Again is he relaxing, or is he getting up to do something because he has agency?

NARRATOR: For Hayden, to be an artist—whether in the 19th or 21st century—is to explore ideas beyond the depicted moment, with a personal and visceral response.

HUGH HAYDEN: You're not a scientist. You're not a historian. You’re conveying this mixture of history and emotion in a skillful and creative way to represent an idea. Ward is doing that at that time using those ingredients and how they made sense to him, and now I’m remixing that again, making my own recipe to further conversation and dialogue.

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