New Yorker cover: Owen Smith's "After the Shift"
As the coronavirus pandemic has forced cities across America to shut down, essential workersranging from nurses to subway conductors and grocery-store clerkshave continued to do their jobs. Their work has exposed not only how deep our lines of dependence are but how the inequities of class, race, and industry dictate who may stay inside and who might have no choice but to venture outdoors. Such work can also be exhaustingan aspect captured in the magazines latest cover, by Owen Smith. Smith drew on the art of the Great Depression, a genre that, in his view, sought to remind us that there is value and dignity in every person. We recently talked to the artist about the image.
As you mentioned, your style evokes the art of the Great Depression. What parallels do you find between that era and the present?
Well, Im currently working on an illustrated edition of The Grapes of Wrath, which I find particularly timely because it follows a family of farm laborers displaced by an environmental catastrophe. They travel hundreds of miles only to be vilified as invaders and exploited by the corporate-owned farms in California. It is a story of class discrimination and a story of survival. Sound familiar?
Youve captured the feeling of exhaustion in the medical workers pose. Can you talk about what goes into depicting this kind of body language? Do you use reference images?
My paintings tend to emphasize form, movement, and gesture. Im also a sculptor and a fan of the expressive figures of artists like Rodin and Constantin Meunier. Their figures had weight. Humans are hyper-attuned to body languagewe can read the mood of other people in an instant. So body language can do a lot of the storytelling without using words.
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