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Artist
Ralph Fasanella
(1914 - 1997)
May Day
Date1948
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsSight: 49 3/8 × 79 3/16 in. (125.4 × 201.1 cm)
Object numberN0052.1994
Credit LineCollection of the Fenimore Art Museum. Gift of Ralph and Eva Fasanella
Photograph by Richard Walker
Label TextMay Day represents Fasanella's attempt to capture the spirit of the workers' movements of the 1930s, focusing upon the huge May Day parades that annually drew up to 200,000 demonstrators to Union Square in New York City. At the left, marchers pour out of the crowded streets and tenements and descend upon New York's Union Square. Their large banners proclaim support for organized labor and racial unity under the overarching cause of "Peace, Democracy, Security." At the head of the parade is a magnificent horse-drawn float, complete with May Pole and women in ethnic costumes. The marchers pass a reviewing stand with a backdrop that serves as a shrine to labor heroes. Across a colorful bed of flowers lies the artist's utopian vision at the right. It is a place where workers, liberated from the burden of twelve- and sixteen-hour shifts, have the freedom to pursue cultural and recreational activities.On View
Not on view