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Cattle skull, Badlands, South Dakota

Arthur Rothstein

Artwork Details

Cattle skull, Badlands, South Dakota
1936
Arthur Rothstein
gelatin silver print on paper
14 in x 14 1/4 in (35.56 cm x 36.2 cm)
Gift of Thomas Wilson '79 and Jill Garling '80
2016/2.434

Description

Subject Matter:

This photograph represents an overhead view of a steer's skull amid a dry and cracked landscape. During the Great Depression (1929-1941), the United States' Farm Security Administration hired photographers to document the effects of the Dust Bowl, which devastated much of the central Great Plains. This photograph became one of the most iconic images produced by the FSA; however, it raised controversy when it was discovered that Rothstein adjusted the position of the skull and experimented with the lighting. Critics of Roosevelt's administation accused Rothstein of doctoring his images in order to manipulate public opinion in support of the New Deal. Additionally, this image was produced several months before the drought began and in an already arid region of the country. Nevertheless, the photograph became a potent symbol of the Dust Bowl and the destruction that it caused. 
 

Physical Description:

A cow skull on parched and cracked ground.

Usage Rights:

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