Dispossessed

Mervin Jules, Dispossessed, ca. 1938, tempera on cotton mounted on fiberboard, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Charles G. Jules, 1981.80.1
Copied Mervin Jules, Dispossessed, ca. 1938, tempera on cotton mounted on fiberboard, 17 7823 18 in. (45.458.7 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Charles G. Jules, 1981.80.1

Artwork Details

Title
Dispossessed
Artist
Date
ca. 1938
Dimensions
17 7823 18 in. (45.458.7 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Charles G. Jules
Mediums Description
tempera on cotton mounted on fiberboard
Classifications
Subjects
  • Object — furniture — bed
  • Architecture Exterior — domestic — apartment
  • Object — furniture — chest
  • Object — furniture — chair
  • State of being — other — homeless
  • Figure group — elderly
  • Cityscape — street
  • Figure group
Object Number
1981.80.1

Artwork Description

Mervin Jules’s scenes of the urban homeless showed the desperation of people ruined by the Great Depression. Here, an elderly couple have lost their home and sit in despair among their possessions, out of work, old, and vulnerable. Their long faces and defeated poses express the depth of misery. A tray on the ground reflects a group of workers waiting in line, emphasizing the desperation of the times. Jules was committed to the social purpose of art, and although he confronted difficult issues, a curator described him in 1941 as having “an optimism, tempered with courage to face facts as they are . . . At the core of his optimism is respect for just people and their occupations.” (Harris, Mervin Jules: Exhibition of Paintings, 1941)