The Shooting of George Wallace , 1973
55.7 x 76.2 cm (h x w)
Photographic silkscreen on paper

© Michael Rothenstein estate

The Shooting of George Wallace clearly shows the influence of great American Pop artist/printmakers such as Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg, with their repeated motifs, collaged photographic and popular images, often set within a larger grid-like composition. Lecturing extensively in America, Rothenstein would have been aware of the burgeoning Civil Rights movement and the dramatic assassination attempt in 1972 on Governor George Wallace, a staunch supporter of segregation, which left him paralysed and wheelchair-bound.

The young black man on the left of the image, whose hands we cannot see, wears clothing reminiscent of prison uniforms, while the girl’s smiling face on the carrier bag invokes mass media and billboard advertising. The angular forms of the easel to the right are ghostly reminders of the stark forms of the electric chair foregrounded in Warhols’s prints and paintings of the same period.

Rothenstein’s later prints of the 1980s are, by contrast, characterised by a more light-hearted mood, a vibrant palette and a repeated visual vocabulary of familiar, more domestic motifs, such as birds, flowers and vessels. Examples of which were included in Ben Uri’s exhibition, No Set Rules (2015), bringing together selected works on paper from the Schlee Collection, Southampton and Ben Uri Collection, London.

Ausgestellt von

Ben Uri Research Unit

Mehr von Ben Uri Research Unit

Coaster leaving Wells , 1990
30.5 x 59.7 cm (h x w)
Oil on board
Ben Uri Research Unit
Life-Boat Café , 1988
55.9 x 66 cm (h x w)
Oil on paper mounted to hardboard
Ben Uri Research Unit
Southwold , 1986
38 x 51 cm (h x w)
Oil on board
Ben Uri Research Unit
National Symbol , 1988
62.2 x 74.9 cm (h x w)
charcoal, crayon and chalk
Ben Uri Research Unit
Flowers , 1985
91.5 x 76 cm (h x w)
Oil on board
Ben Uri Research Unit