EPISODE · Jul 25, 2024 · 31 MIN
Detroit Industry and ‘The Mural’
from Tales from the Reuther Library
Dr. Jay Cephas considers two Depression-era murals in Detroit and their contrasting messaging about workers, labor, and power. Diego Rivera’s famed Detroit Industry murals, commissioned by Edsel Ford for the Detroit Institute of Arts in 1932, champions industrial and technological progress and the factory workers who fueled it. In contrast, Walter Speck and Barbara Wilson’s 1937 untitled mural, which originally hung in the UAW Local 174 union hall and now hangs behind the reference desk at the Reuther Library, champions the progress those industrial workers made laboring for their own welfare via union action. Dr. Cephas is Assistant Professor of the History and Theory of Architecture at Princeton University. His essay “Detroit Industry and ‘The Mural’: Representing Labor and Reappropriating Care in the Museum and in the Union Hall,” was published in the 2023 volume, Architectures of Care: From the Intimate to the Common. Related Resources: “Detroit Industry and ‘The Mural’: Representing Labor and Reappropriating Care in the Museum and in the Union Hall” Collection Spotlight: UAW Local 174 Mural Detroit Industry, North Wall Detroit Industry, South Wall Detroit Industry, West Wall Detroit Industry, East Wall Episode Credits Interviewee: Jay Cephas Producers: Dan Golodner and Troy Eller English Music: Bart Bealmear
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Detroit Industry and ‘The Mural’
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