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Kunsten Museum of Modern Art Aalborg

Kong Christians Allé 50
9000 Aalborg
Denmark

Phone: +45 99 82 41 00
kunsten@kunsten.dk
CVR: 47 21 82 68
faktura@kunstenfaktura.dk

 

Danske Bank

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Richard Hamilton – Kent State (1970)

Richard Hamilton was one of the founders of British Pop Art, making him one of the first artists to utilise mass-produced images from popular culture, including the worlds of film and advertising. For an entire week in May 1970, Richard Hamilton watched TV and photographed everything he saw on the screen. That formed the basis for this work. It is a photographic ‘translation’ of a televised event from Kent State, Ohio in the United States on 4 May 1970. Today it is referred to as the ‘Kent State Massacre’. Four students at Kent State University in Ohio were shot and killed by the Ohio National Guard, who fired 67 shots at an unarmed crowd of young, peaceful demonstrators protesting against the Vietnam War. 9 other students were injured. They included Dean Kahler, depicted here in Hamilton’s work, shrouded in the colours of the American flag. The tragic event caused a national uprising and 4 million students throughout the United States went on strike. The motif in Hamilton’s work looks at the way in which information is imparted to the public, in a world where, day in and day out, we are confronted and bombarded with increasingly more images and information we then have to process. In particular, his work is a reflection on the relationship between anti-violence and violence, as represented by an activist and a state – a relationship that also seems topical today.