Power and the People — 3D Virtual Gallery by Carley Beatty

Power is often talked about through governments, political leaders, and major historical events, but the people who are most affected by it are often ordinary individuals just trying to live their lives. This exhibition explores how systems of power shape human experiences through segregation, social conflict, colonization, political oppression, and war. Rather than focusing on the people who create or hold power, these artworks focus on the people who have to live with the consequences of it. Together, they ask viewers to think about how authority is created, how injustice is maintained, and how people respond through survival, resistance, and resilience. Ai Weiwei once said, "Everything is art. Everything is politics" (Art21, 2011). I think this quote connects well to this exhibition because all of these artworks show that politics are not separate from everyday life. Decisions made by people in power affect where people can go, how they are treated, what stories are remembered, and sometimes whether entire communities survive. Even though these artworks were created in different countries and time periods, they all show the impact that power and injustice can have on ordinary people. The exhibition begins with Norman Rockwell's The Problem We All Live With. By focusing on Ruby Bridges as a child walking to school, Rockwell shifts attention away from legal debates about segregation and instead shows what those decisions looked like in one person's everyday life. Faith Ringgold's The American People Series #20: Die expands that focus by showing the violence and division that can grow within communities affected by larger social tensions. Rather than offering a clear answer or someone to blame, Ringgold forces viewers to sit with the human cost of conflict. Kent Monkman's mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People): Resurgence of the People shifts the conversation toward Indigenous experiences of colonization. Instead of celebrating leaders or conquest, Monkman focuses on families, elders, children, and communities trying to survive together. The painting highlights both the damage caused by colonization and the resilience of the people who continue to endure it. Yue Minjun's The Execution explores another response to power by focusing on the emotional and psychological effects of oppression. The laughter in the painting feels uncomfortable because it makes it difficult to know what the figures are actually feeling. It suggests that people do not always show fear or respond to injustice in obvious ways. The exhibition concludes with Pablo Picasso's Guernica, one of the most famous anti-war paintings in history. Instead of focusing on military victory or political leaders, Picasso emphasizes fear, grief, and suffering. The people in the painting are left to deal with the consequences of violence and decisions made by those in power. I arranged these artworks to move from individual experiences of injustice toward broader examples of conflict and oppression while keeping people at the center of each story. Even though the situations are different, all of these works remind us that real people are the ones living with the consequences of decisions made by others. They also show the strength people can have through survival, resilience, and resistance, even during some of the most difficult circumstances.

A 3D virtual art gallery on Galerra featuring 5 artworks. Walk through the gallery in an immersive 3D experience.

View all artworks in 2D

Artworks in this gallery

About the creator

Carley Beatty on Galerra