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The Indiana Murals of Thomas Hart Benton
May 30 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
FreeCommissioned by the State of Indiana for the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, American painter Thomas Hart Benton, known for his realism in depicting everyday American life, created a 250-foot-long mural of Indiana’s culture and industry, illustrating scenes from the state’s earliest day to the Great Depression. Originally displayed as a continuous piece, the mural’s 26 panels were acquired by Indiana University in 1939 and later installed in three buildings: Indiana University Auditorium, Indiana University Cinema, and Woodburn Hall. Of the two panels displayed in Woodburn Hall, “Parks, the Circus, the Klan, the Press” representing Indiana culture in the 1920s with images of a Ku Klux Klan rally and burning cross, has long sparked controversy.
On May 30, Indiana Landmarks’ affinity group Indiana Modern welcomes art historian and author Henry Adams to present an illustrated talk on Benton’s life and work, including an in-depth look at his murals displayed in Woodburn Hall. The Ruth Coulter Heede Professor of Art History at Case Western Reserve University, Adams has authored over 400 publications in the field of American art history from Thomas Jefferson to Jackson Pollock. In 1989, in partnership with filmmaker Ken Burns, Adams produced a documentary on Benton, which was broadcast nationally on PBS to an audience of 20 million. He has also written multiple books on the artist, including Thomas Hart Benton: Discoveries and Interpretations (2015).
The event is Free and available In Person at the Indiana Landmarks Center and virtually on Zoom. Registration for the Zoom link is requested and available at https://www.indianalandmarks.org/event/thomas-hart-benton/.