The exhibition title refers to the Tin Man, a character from the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz who earnestly sets out in search of a heart, only to discover that he has had compassion all along
Date/Time: Jul 22 2020, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Vancouver, Vancouver Art Gallery | Event calendar
Spectacles of physical power and violence have long permeated the visual cultures of Western civilizations. Battle scenes, warriors and athletes have figured in visual art since antiquity, when victorious generals and emperors were commonly immortalized in sculpture. Presented at a time that coincides with presidential and congressional election campaigns in the United States, The Tin Man Was a Dreamer draws on these traditions while subtly responding to this historical moment by examining the ways in which power is constructed, disseminated, enacted and denied. The exhibition title refers to the Tin Man, a character from the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz who earnestly sets out in search of a heart, only to discover that he has had compassion all along. The tin man as a motif also commonly appeared in American advertising and political cartoons in the late nineteenth century to symbolize workers who had been dehumanized by industrialization, or pugnacious politicians who continually assailed their opponents. Featuring works in a variety of media—from seventeenth-century paintings to contemporary video—the exhibition examines topics ranging from displays of aggression, physical posturing, the performance of the self, political theatre and the role of mass media in framing public perception.
March 21, 2020 - August 23, 2020
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