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Image Not Available for Battle of Lake Erie
Battle of Lake Erie
Image Not Available for Battle of Lake Erie

Battle of Lake Erie

Artist Hale Aspacio Woodruff (American,1900-1980)
Dateca. 1942
MediumTempera on masonite
DimensionsOverall: 11 1/4 x 11 in. (28.6 x 27.9 cm)
ClassificationsModern art
Credit LineGift of Mr. A. Ailon
Object number83.593
Terms
  • Battle
  • War of 1812
  • African-American Artist
  • Brown
  • Blue
  • Red
  • Yellow
  • Green
  • White
  • Black
  • Pink
  • Multi-colored
  • Atlanta, GA
On View
On view
DescriptionThis is tempera on masonite panel painting. The foreground displays a very foreshortened scene of seven people in a boat are rowing away from a large ship. The ship mast is broken. On the rowboat, a red banner displays most of the phrase, "Don't give up the ship". The figures gaze in dismay and horror at some unknown spectacle off to their right. Their eyes are deeply shadowed with dark sockets, as if their faces were modeled from clay. This depicts a scene from the War of 1812.

Label TextHale Woodruff American, 1900–1980 clockwise from lower left: The Death of Crispus Attucks, ca. 1942 Tempera on board Battle of Lake Erie, ca. 1942 Tempera on board Negroes with Jackson at New Orleans, ca. 1942 Tempera on board Sergeant Carney and the Death of General Shaw, ca. 1942 Tempera on board Plans in 1942 for a new building for the municipal Register of Deeds in Washington, D.C., included a program of murals honoring the heroism of African Americans throughout U.S. history. Hale Woodruff, an art teacher at historically black Atlanta University, submitted proposals for this prestigious commission, including these four panels. Woodruff had studied mural painting under Mexican modernist Diego Rivera. Although he was not successful in this competition, his works decorate many other public buildings and demonstrate the U.S. government’s active sponsorship of African American artists. Gifts of Mr. A. Ailon 82.95, 83.593–595, respectively