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Civil Rights Congress

Artist Elizabeth Catlett American, 1915-2012
Date1949
DimensionsH: 17 1/2 in. (44.5 cm); W: 11 in. (27.9 cm)
MediumLinoleum cut.
ClassificationPrints
Credit LineGift of Dr. Elizabeth Catlett
Object number
2006.151
Not on View
Collections
  • Works on Paper
Published Referencescf. Lewis, Samella, The Art of Elizabeth Catlett, Claremont, CA, Handcraft Studios, 1984, p. 173 (repr.).

cf. Herzog, Melanie Anne, Elizabeth Catlett: An American Artist in Mexico, Seattle, University of Washington Press, 2005, p. 100, fig. 55 (repr.) p. 99.

cf. Herzog, Melanie Anne, Elizabeth Catlett: In the Image of the People, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2006, p.30, pl. 1 (repr. col.) p. 4.

Exhibition History

Toledo Museum of Art, Speaking Out: The Art of Elizabeth Catlett, June 15 - September 23, 2007.

Toledo Museum of Art, People Get Ready: 50 Years of Civil Rights, June 27-September 21, 2014.

Label TextThis striking image, with its unsettling references to lynching and the Ku Klux Klan, pays tribute to William L. Patterson (1891–1980). He was an active member of the American Communist Party and an author of We Charge Genocide, a 1951 petition accusing the United States government of willful intent to murder African Americans because of its failure to legislate against the practice of lynching. When he presented this document to the United Nations, his passport was revoked. Patterson became national executive secretary of the Civil Rights Congress, an activist group formed in 1946 that organized protests and advocated for civil rights legislation.

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