On view

Print and Drawings
Howard Mele Gallery

Sacco and Vanzetti: In the Courtroom Cage,

1931–32

Ben Shahn, 1898–1969; born Kaunas, Russian Empire (Lithuania); died New York, NY
x1965-69
Faces play a key role in this dramatic scene, one of twenty-three works that Shahn devoted to the famous trial of the Italian immigrants Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, who were executed in 1927 for armed-robbery murders in Massachusetts that they probably did not commit. Called The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti, this narrative series established Shahn’s international reputation as a socially and politically engaged artist. Shahn based the composition on a press photograph of Vanzetti, to the left, and Sacco in the prisoner’s dock with Sacco’s wife, Rosina, leaning in from the other side of the “cage.” In addition to altering the source photograph by widening the space between the two men and exaggerating the size of their heads, Shahn created the immediacy of an eyewitness trial sketch by painting quickly, blending wet media in the highlights and shadows.

Information

Title
Sacco and Vanzetti: In the Courtroom Cage
Dates

1931–32

Maker
Medium
Watercolor and gouache and pen and black ink
Dimensions
21.5 × 25.7 cm (8 7/16 × 10 1/8 in.) frame: 43.2 × 55.9 × 1.3 cm (17 × 22 × 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Dr. Walter E. Rothman
Object Number
x1965-69
Place Made

North America, United States, New York, New York

Signatures
Signed in brush and black ink, lower center: Ben Shahn
Culture

Edith Breckinridge, Los Angeles, CA; Dr. Walter E. Rothman (1898-1966), San Francisco, CA; gifted to the Princeton University Art Museum, 1965.