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A Memphis juke joint

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    (light piano music)
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    - [Dr. Zucker] We're in
    the Georgia Museum of Art,
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    looking at a large
    painting by Vertis Hayes.
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    This is called "Juke Joint,"
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    and it was painted in 1946.
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    - [Dr. Harris] Interesting
    to see a Southern scene,
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    probably somewhere outside
    of Memphis, Tennessee.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And it's
    interesting to look
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    at an easel painting
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    because Vertis Hayes
    is probably best known
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    for the murals that he
    produced in Memphis,
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    but also that he produced in New York City
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    as part of the WPA, most
    famously at Harlem Hospital.
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    So let's start with what a juke joint is.
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    - [Dr. Harris] Essentially,
    a juke joint would have been
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    almost like a bar or saloon
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    noted for having great
    music and entertainment.
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    It was a central part of many communities,
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    particularly African-American communities.
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    They could have come in any form,
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    a small place in a rural area,
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    in larger cities, they might've taken up
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    a corner of a city block
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    and they became a central meeting place.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And this does seem like
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    the central meeting
    place in this painting,
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    but the building is isolated.
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    - [Dr. Harris] The fact
    that it's by itself
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    is really interesting
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    because if you think of the time period,
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    you would have seen
    larger cities like Memphis
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    that would have had clusters of buildings,
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    lots of people, lots of cars.
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    And here you have this more isolated scene
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    where the juke joint
    is the central building
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    in the composition.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] The building
    almost feels alive.
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    It's curving, it seems to
    almost be stretching upward.
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    - [Dr. Harris] You can feel the energy
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    of what's going on inside.
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    You can faintly see the colors
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    that seem like they're
    bouncing on the window panes,
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    but everything is directed
    toward the juke joint.
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    If you look at the electrical
    pole across the street
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    leaning in toward the juke joint building.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And there's a
    gentle curve to the roof line
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    of the juke joint,
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    which is echoed in the wires of the pole
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    And even in the clouds.
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    This was a carefully composed image.
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    - [Dr. Harris] There's a
    house that's down the road,
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    and there's an outhouse.
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    They all have these curves.
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    Everything is moving.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And that
    kind of organic quality
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    makes this painting feel so human.
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    It makes it feel approachable.
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    And this is a characteristic
    of a kind of painting
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    that is known as social realism.
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    - [Dr. Harris] Vertis Hayes was part
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    of a larger community of artists
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    that would have participated
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    in this social realist
    vein in American art,
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    showing social scenes of people
    active in their communities.
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    Even more mundane scenes,
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    or genre scenes of various communities
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    across the United States,
    particularly in the South,
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    where there was a lot of interest
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    in showing rural areas such as this.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And by genre scenes,
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    we mean scenes of everyday life.
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    Not a historically important event,
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    nobody of particular note,
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    but just the things that
    people do every day.
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    And here we see lots of people
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    going about their every day activities.
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    - [Dr. Harris] You see
    everything from the people
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    entering and exiting the juke joint,
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    to the tamale seller,
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    the dog that seated on the
    border of the composition,
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    the man in the overalls, who's a customer,
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    waiting for his tamale to be prepared.
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    And then even the man in the green suit,
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    who appears to be heading
    toward the juke joint.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And then
    further up the hill
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    we see a man in yellow pants
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    standing right in front
    of this woman in white.
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    Even further up the hill,
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    we can just make out the
    silhouette of yet another figure.
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    - [Dr. Harris] That figure is mirroring
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    the curving electrical pole
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    and the house and the roof
    line of the juke joint.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] And then
    the man with his foot up
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    on the runner of a police car,
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    talking to two officers.
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    - [Dr. Harris] We're not sure
    about what that conversation
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    might be about,
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    if they know each other
    or if there's a problem.
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    It's interesting how the police car
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    is functionally oppositionally
    to what's going on
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    on the left-hand side.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] The one
    form that's as powerful
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    as the building is that road.
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    It's almost a mountain.
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    - [Dr. Harris] You can see that the road
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    is leading toward the viewer.
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    Everything leans downward.
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    You wonder if this will
    eventually be paved?
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    - [Dr. Zucker] You can see where
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    the rain has run down that
    road, has eroded that soil.
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    And it really expresses for me
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    the economic neglect of a rural area.
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    And it's a period when the United States
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    has just lived through
    the Second World War,
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    but it's also a moment
    when the Great Depression
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    is still a recent memory.
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    - [Dr. Harris] We're not really sure
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    what time of day it might be.
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    Probably getting close to nighttime
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    because you can see that the
    artist emphasizes the bulb.
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    But that purple-ish tint,
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    you wonder if there's a storm
    that's about to touch down.
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    - [Dr. Zucker] But also
    just that everything
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    in this painting seems to be in flux
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    and to be moving, to be alive.
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    There are no perfect right
    angles in that building.
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    Everything in the sky
    seems to be changing.
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    And even the road, a
    slower kind of change.
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    The change of erosion.
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    One of the things that I
    think is really interesting
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    is the attention to signage,
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    to the everyday things
    that somebody would see.
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    We see the large beer sign,
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    but then closer to us,
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    we also see what would probably be
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    an enameled sign, advertising beer.
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    We see Moe's Cafe.
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    Perhaps there's a little blue
    sign that is alerting people
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    that there's a public telephone here.
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    There's all these wonderful details
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    that capture our attention
    and make the scene
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    feel really authentic.
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    (light piano music)
Title:
A Memphis juke joint
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
05:14

English subtitles

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