Here's my problem. At the moment, I'm in college and it's the summer semester. One of my classes is an art class and the assignment for this week was to pick a work (visual, music, sculpture, etc.) that best illustrates our view of human nature. Then we had to explain how it illustrates our view of human nature.
The first work to come to mind was "The Problem We All Live With" by Norman Rockwell.
Looking for a good image of this painting led me to others that seemed appropriate, like "Southern Justice", "Blood Brothers", and "Love Ouanga". One by one, I rejected these on the basis of being too hopeful. The work I finally settled on was this one. Be warned -- it's very graphic, and very disturbing.
It's a photo taken in Marion, Indiana, in 1930 that shows a crowd in a fine mood celebrating at the base of a tree from which two black men have been hanged.
That's my take on human nature. And remember that I rejected the others for being too hopeful. "Southern Justice," in particular seemed to indicate that even in the face of horror and injustice, there is nobility. That painting depicts an actual event, and the white man standing will die, but still he faces his killers, while holding the dying black man and while the other white man lies dead.
That was too hopeful. I went with the photo of the crowd picnicking under the hanging bodies of the two men it just murdered in cold blood. Look over at the happy people on the left, especially.
Am I really that hopeless?
The first work to come to mind was "The Problem We All Live With" by Norman Rockwell.
Looking for a good image of this painting led me to others that seemed appropriate, like "Southern Justice", "Blood Brothers", and "Love Ouanga". One by one, I rejected these on the basis of being too hopeful. The work I finally settled on was this one. Be warned -- it's very graphic, and very disturbing.
It's a photo taken in Marion, Indiana, in 1930 that shows a crowd in a fine mood celebrating at the base of a tree from which two black men have been hanged.
That's my take on human nature. And remember that I rejected the others for being too hopeful. "Southern Justice," in particular seemed to indicate that even in the face of horror and injustice, there is nobility. That painting depicts an actual event, and the white man standing will die, but still he faces his killers, while holding the dying black man and while the other white man lies dead.
That was too hopeful. I went with the photo of the crowd picnicking under the hanging bodies of the two men it just murdered in cold blood. Look over at the happy people on the left, especially.
Am I really that hopeless?


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