SIPG34_090228_0650
Existing comment: Robert Brackman -- Somewhere in America (1934):
America looks out at the world from the eyes of a child in this painting Robert Brackman made for the Public Works of Art Project. The artist's accustomed portrait subjects were rich white people or nude models who took careful poses in the artist's studio. This African American child afforded the artist, an immigrant from Russia, a very different view of the American scene. Brackman suggested the child's modest American home by placing her in a ladder-back chair at a table with a red plaid cloth. But the domestic interior is far less compelling than the bold child, who fixes the artist with her unflinching faze. Her stuffed toy lies forgotten in her lap while she scrutinizes Brackman at his easel. She wiggles restlessly, not caring that her dress has hiked up to reveal the tops of her stockings. The ambitious young immigrant artist identified this little girl with far more than her home in New York. He allied her independent spirit with the future of the whole country, titling his portrait of her "Somewhere in America."
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