Emmett Till Memorial Triptych With the Outside and the Inside is a painting by Art Nomad Sandra Hansen which was uploaded on August 22nd, 2011.
Emmett Till Memorial Triptych With the Outside and the Inside
This monumental, triptych, stands over nine feet tall and eight feet wide. When the doors are closed Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King are... more
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Price
$20,000
Dimensions
96.000 x 114.000 x 24.000 inches
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Title
Emmett Till Memorial Triptych With the Outside and the Inside
Artist
Art Nomad Sandra Hansen
Medium
Painting - Oil On Masonite
Description
This monumental, triptych, stands over nine feet tall and eight feet wide. When the doors are closed Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King are welcoming/greeting you. The dawn of a new day has come and the Tallahatchie River is lit up with the dawn and rushing past. Inside the doors are three more paintings that tell the story, of the torture and murder of fourteen year old, African American, Emmett Till on August 28, 1955. A Chicagoan, Emmett was visiting family in Mississippi when his cousins dared him to whistle at a white woman. He was then kidnapped, severely beaten, shot dead, and thrown in the Tallahatchie River. The Emmett Till Memorial Triptych references a Christian church altar piece. Instead of showing Christ dying for the sins of all humans, Emmett Till is shown as a victim of a lynching whose death brings life to the Civil Rights Movement. The left panel is a Crucifixion scene with Emmett's lifeless body, weighted down with a cotton gin fan, being thrown into the Tallahatchie River. In the center panel, his mother, Mamie Bradley weeps in a pose similar to Michaelangelo's Pieta. Ms. Bradley refused to let her son be forgotten and instead held an open casket funeral, attended by up to 50,000 mourners. The right panel shows the Resurrection scene with the river turning into the leaders and participants of the Civil Rights Movement. The backsides of the two side panels have full life paintings of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. (not shown) welcoming people into the Civil Rights Movement on the dawning of a new day. This will be displayed at Fountain St. Church in Grand Rapids, MI for Art Prize Sept 21-Oct. 9, 2011.
Uploaded
August 22nd, 2011