5.31.2010

In Memoriam

National Park Service poster, Dorothy Waugh
Montana Historical Society/Image: Posters for the People

As of May 27: an Alternet rundown on some key factors in the BP disaster.

Early in the month, there were reports that when the rig exploded, BP executives were aboard—for a party celebrating their "safety record."

Ever since, Thom Hartmann has posed the question: were workers pressured to skip installing the top cap—to get the place ready for a visit by big shots?

Whether this can be established or not: considering the ethics of Corporate Culture, what could be more predictable?

The same goes for discovery of BP's cost benefit analysis of workers' lives.

Entitled, "Cost benefit analysis of three little pigs," and concluding that the "piggies" should build their houses with the cheapest material.

Except that "the little pigs" were never offered a choice—it was a very Big Pig indeed, that decided to house expendable workers in trailers, instead of more expensive, blast-resistant structures.

The reich-wing wasted no time in pushing the "Obama's Katrina" meme into the media.

Absurd as it is, there are parallels—as in any big event—in how many threads there are to unravel, and in how little truth gets to the general public. And there's all that BP history, and the tactic of subcontracting to diffuse responsibility.

And it's impossible to know what motivates this administration's response.

Are they technocrats who believe, despite all history, that corporations know best and will act responsibly?

Is it part of the ongoing need to cover up the behavior of the Republican predecessor? CBS News—putting it mildly and in quotes—on Big Oil's "Cozy Relationship" with Inspectors under Bush.

Obama gets the thanks he will alway get—he's accused of unAmericanly putting his boot BP's throat.

5.15.2010

May Read: When Artists (and Others) Worked

Artist: Vera Bock
Library of Congress
When Art Worked: The New Deal, Art, and Democracy
Text by Roger G. Kennedy; "An Illustrated Documentary by David Larkin" - 2009

Former director of the National Park Service and Director Emeritus, National Museum of American History, Kennedy provides the text for Larkin's lavish design.

This oversize volume's heft comes from its profuse illustrations, which include American art preceding the New Deal—sometimes by a century or two. The authors mean to provide context for what was created under the Works Progress Administration, although the result is somewhat sprawling.

The chapter on "Indians, Parks, the CCC, and the Arts," for instance, covers eighteenth and nineteenth century painters' portrayals of Indians; Western landscape painting; the work of Audubon—all factors, Kennedy writes, in helping build a popular constituency for conservation, and ultimately, establishment of national parks.

With the New Deal, Roosevelt doubled the size of the National Park System to fifty-six parks, monuments, and other holdings. Previously administered by a mix of agencies, authority was now consolidated under the NPS, and Civilian Conservation Corps labor was employed for park development and maintenance. Ultimately, about 120,000 young men built structures; planted trees; constructed roads, trails, and bridges; and in all, created much of our parks legacy.

As in other WPA programs, the CCC employed artists and photographers to document and publicize the work, and Kennedy acknowledges those efforts—along with the CCC projects themselves—as part of the entire "WPA art" enterprise.

The book uses recent photographs to illustrate a range of CCC park projects as they look today. Among the examples are:
Restorations of historic structures (Mingus Mill, Shenandoah National Park).

Historic reconstructions, like Bandelier Historic District in Bandelier National Monument. [Some interior details are here and here.]

New construction using local materials (Lake Taghkanic State Park, New York).

Dam building or improvement (Cherry Plain State Park, New York).
The book provides a good overview of the numerous arts-connected programs established under the WPA. It also notes the various agencies and funding mechanisms used to create projects. An example: with 1100 new post offices built by WPA labor and a Department of Treasury charged with commissioning art for federal buildings, the mural painting program was born.

I admit to largely skimming Kennedy's text, which had a heavy historical focus on Great Men (plus a couple of women)—FDR and members of his administration.

For background, a good online history of the rise and demise of the arts programs is Don Adams' and Arlene Goldbard's "New Deal Cultural Programs: Experiments in Cultural Democracy."

Kennedy and Larkin do cover an impressive range of arts projects enabled by New Deal.

The large chapter on parks includes architectural drawings of historic houses, churches, lighthouses, and other structures, done for the Historic American Buildings Survey.

An "Art at Work on the Park Landscape" sub-section includes bridges (Stevens Creek Bridge, Mt Rainier) and roads (Sequoia and Kings Canyon Tunnel Rock.)

Another section, "Civic Parks," includes more WPA-built projects, like San Antonio Riverwalk.

My search for images akin to what's in the book led to these great kos diaries about some forgotten history of our gubmint-hating southern states:
The nation's first CCC project, Shenandoah National Park;

WPA development of Texas parks (including Riverwalk).
A chapter on the Federal Music Project notes local programs around the country, where musicians were employed in giving public concerts and providing school music instruction. In 1932 John Lomax had begun field recordings of folk musicians for the Library of Congress; he later served in WPA projects that extended this work.

A section on the Federal Theatre Project includes a number of nice poster designs.

Library of Congress
Artist: Aida McKenzie
Kennedy quotes lyrics from "Sing For Your Supper," which poked fun at anti-New Deal perceptions and propaganda.

A skit featured WPA workers, toy shovels in hands, singing—
When you look at things today
Like Boulder Dam and TVA
And all those playgrounds where kids can play
We did it—by leaning on a shovel!

Library of Congress
Artist: Vera Bock
A chapter on photography as used to document the effects of the Depression is illustrated by work from the major names active in the program. It's no surprise that the artistic standouts are nine pages of photos by Walker Evans.

The book ends, in Kennedy's words, with
... three examples of the redemptive power of art, as it served the American polity during the New Deal period. In each case the materials were at hand, but like the land itself, had been abused, neglected, or insufficiently appreciated; in each, a program of public works provided jobs and occasions for gifts of genius toward the public good.
Red Rocks Amphitheater, near Denver, was built over five years. (A closeup of some construction details is here.

Oregon's Timberline Lodge was created 6000 feet up a slope of Mt. Hood. Kennedy writes of how
...Building trade laborers received the top rate of ninety cents per hour, and unskilled laborers fifty-five cents per hour. The price of materials was kept down by using recycled goods. Women wove upholstery, drapes and bedspreads, and hand-hooked rugs from cut-up CCC blankets and other scraps. Newell posts were fashioned from cedar utility poles, their crowns carved into bears, seals and other animals. The screens hanging in front of the fireplaces were made from the tire chains of the trucks that carried materials and workers up the mountain, and the fireplace andirons were forged from old railroad rails...
There's a nice look at some interior details here.

La Purísima, outside Lompoc, was a restoration of a disused mission first founded in the eighteenth century. After the project was conceived in 1934, various stages in constructing a water system and reconstructing buildings, as well as crafting interiors and furnishings of the mission period continued until late 1941. The finished mission was turned over over to the State of California the state to administer. The flickr set here has lots of exterior and interior detail, including chapel and living spaces.

Kennedy and Larkin memorialize the art of the WPA with wonderful illustrations, beautifully printed—in China.

5.06.2010

New Media

Pennsylvania Federal Art Project
Artist: Leon Carlin
Library of Congress
After the bank refuses to negotiate, a disabled Ohio man seals himself and activist friends in his foreclosed home.

In yet another way of distinguishing our economic depression from that other one: the group livestreams events as they unfold.

Free From The Constitution

Credit: "Penna Art WPA"
Library of Congress
Despite the court ruling against it, today is the national day of subverting the separation of church and state while serving as a propaganda tool for the religious right.

My prayers—for that crowd to leave the rest of us alone—are never answered.

Though a god of schadenfreude appears to exist.

Caught on film with rent boy: anti-gay activist and Family Research Council co-founder, George Rekers.

5.02.2010

Free Government Service

Department of the Interior, National Park Service, c. 1938
Library of Congress
While Greeks demonstrate against shock therapy, here's a surprise: May 1 in LA. Crowd estimates are enormous, especially when compared to your average teabagger hatefest... Which one is it that rates greater media coverage, again?

Of course immigrants have to be demonized, as they are likely to understand the importance of organizing. Follow their lead, and the native-born might have more rights—say, in the workplace.

But Arizona is just aiming for the usual GOP trifecta: appeal to racists, distract from real issues, and steal elections—in this case, by disenfranchising Latinos.


First there are worker deaths, with the bodies unrecovered. Now, unprecedented environmental disaster is in the making, because Big Oil Fought Off New Safety Rules Before Rig Explosion.

Last September, in opposition to regulation efforts by the Minerals and Management Service of the Interior Department—
...the American Petroleum Institute and the Offshore Operators Committee, in a joint letter to MMS, emphasized their preference for voluntary programs with "enough flexibility to suit the corporate culture of each company."
"Corporate culture" being, "dead employees are a tiny, tiny cost of doing business."

As in in the payout offer since last month's union-free workplace/unsafe conditions-leading-to-deaths national news event.

And the environment has no relatives to be bought off, after its murder.

Besides BP's role in this nightmare, the name "Halliburton" seems to crop up.

We also have to go back a few years, to this
Papantonio laid the blame squarely in Dick Cheney's lap and said this was one of the deregulations of the energy industry that was negotiated during his secret meetings with oil industry and other energy executives during George Bush's first term in office and called this the biggest under-reported aspect of this disaster.