1
Portfolios%3D%222527%22%20and%20Sort_Artist%3D%22Gropper,%20William%22
Painting
The Opposition
William Gropper, 1897 - 1977
Gropper, William
United States
1897 - 1977
Male
28 x 38 in. (71.1 x 96.5 cm)
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overall framed size
horizontal
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
1942
1942
1942
1900-2000, 20th century, American Scene/Regionalism, Encyclopedia Britannica Collection, men, paintings, politics in art, Social Realism
Painting
William Gropper satirized the United States Senate in The Opposition as lawmakers were threatening to cut significant federal funding for the arts. Gropper wrote, “I have portrayed the type of representative that is opposed to progress and culture. The U.S. Senate…[has] such an influence on American life, good and bad, that it has even affected the artist and the cultural development of our country.”
William Gropper supported himself with his political cartoons, satirical drawings, and illustrations, most of which pointed out how the burdens of society were largely borne by the working class.
[Gallery label text, 2024]
Lawmakers were threatening to cut significant federal funding for the arts when political cartoonist and painter William Gropper satirized the United States Senate in The Opposition. Gropper wrote, “I have portrayed the type of representative that is opposed to progress and culture. The U.S. Senate…[has] such an influence on American life, good and bad, that it has even affected the artist and the cultural development of our country.”
[Gallery label text, 2007]
William Gropper was best known for his caustic commentary on the American political and social scene. He depicted realistic and identifiable subjects; The Opposition was one of a number of paintings and illustrations that came out of his 1934 assignment for the magazine Vanity Fair, to sketch legislators in action in Washington. Gropper made no bones about his distaste for politics and used his art to further his point of view:
"I have portrayed the type of representative that is opposed to progress and culture. The U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives have had such an influence on American life, good and bad, that it has even affected the artist and the cultural development of our country. No matter how far removed from politics artists may be, it seems to strike home. Only recently one blasting speech of a reactionary representative resulted in not only doing away with the Section of Fine Art, but also dismissing the Graphic Division of the OWI [Office of War Information] and nullifying art reportage for the War Department."
Gropper's start as a newspaper illustrator informed the creative processes of the rest of his life. His work retained his journalist's interest in issues of the day, giving it a particularly topical essence presented in a dynamic, expressionistic format.
[Gallery label text, 2006]
lower left
1951.5
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
51.5TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
4 x 5
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51.5DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/14/2000
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51.5DI2
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Memorial Art Gallery
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