
The Way They Live
Thomas Anshutz
An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art
Born in Kentucky and raised in West Virginia, Thomas Anshutz moved to Brooklyn in 1871. During that turbulent decade, a number of artists painted images of African American life with varying degrees of naturalism and stereotyping. Here, Anshutz embraces the former, portraying a woman and two children in a well-tended patch of tobacco. The mountain setting suggests the painting may be based on a scene observed on the artist’s travels around West Virginia. While produced after the end of Reconstruction, both the depicted family unity and the financial independence they could derive from the tobacco cash-crop reveal a more nuanced commentary on their situation. Nevertheless, the painting’s title underlines the distance between the presumed White middle-class viewer and the Black laboring subject.
The American Wing
An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art
The American Wing's ever-evolving collection comprises some 20,000 works of art by African American, Euro American, Latin American, and Native American men and women. Ranging from the colonial to early-modern periods, the holdings include painting, sculpture, works on paper, and decorative arts—including furniture, textiles, ceramics, glass, silver, metalwork, jewelry, basketry, quill and bead embroidery—as well as historical interiors and architectural fragments.