The Hidden History of the Arnautoff Mural

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I respect the feelings of the students who testified at the San Francisco Board of Education meeting about the mural at George Washington High School, and their desire to have their communities and histories treated in a respectful way. They deserve, not just respect, but solidarity in fighting the pervasive racism and exploitation in our society. The mural was painted in solidarity with that fight. I think it is a mistake, therefore, to interpret it as a symbol of colonialism, white supremacy and oppression. 

The mural was created in 1936 by Victor Arnautoff, a Russian immigrant and a Communist, who painted it as a critique of the racist boosterism that was the way high school history was taught in that era (even when I was in high school in the early 60s). The 1930s were the years when the left and the Communist movement were strong in San Francisco. These were the years of the General Strike of 1934, which broke the color line on the docks – the reason the longshore union created in that strike, Local 10 of the ILWU, is a majority-African American union today. These were the years of the organization of the Chinese Workers Mutual Aid Association in San Francisco, many of whose members belonged to the Communist Party.  

Arnautoff belonged to the Communist Party as well. In that party African American and white longshore and Chinese laundry and garment workers and red painters like Arnautoff would have undoubtedly known each other and talked about the politics they shared. Fighting racism and class exploitation, and supporting revolutionary movements against imperialism, was the common ground among those radicals – the basis of their politics. For an artist like Arnautoff, painting was therefore a political act, a responsibility to oppose racism and class exploitation in the art he produced.

The mural he painted in the high school was a critique of earlier murals produced for the Pan American Exposition, an imperialist celebration and world’s fair on Treasure Island, paid for by San Francisco’s wealthy elite. That “official” artwork showed California history as the advance of “civilization” triumphing over “savagery.”  The Admiral Dewey statue in Union Square, celebrating the colonization of the Philippines, was the same kind of art produced in that earlier era. An even uglier example is the art shown in the Forbidden Book, a book and exhibition of racist and imperialist cartoons collected by Abraham Ignacio and published a few years ago. This is what Arnautoff was reacting against. When the WPA, that is, the New Deal, began paying unemployed artists, it meant that artwork could be created that didn’t have to please the Crockers and other elite San Francisco families, and could therefore tell the truth about U.S. history. Arnautoff’s murals were a product of that short-lived political space.

“… when artists believed that art had to take sides with workers and oppressed people, and tell social truth.”  

When the mural shows the grey hordes of settlers advancing past the body of a dead Native American, it was a powerful truth for that time, especially because these settlers are being urged onward by George Washington. The school was named for Washington, so Arnautoff’s message to students was to take a hard look at who he was.  Showing that the wealth is being produced by Black slaves, for the rich white colonial merchants who owned them, is telling the truth again. It doesn’t glorify slavery – it attacks it, and even more important, it shows who got rich from it. Washington was a plantation slave-owner. 

The mural shows Native Americans with arms, which is also a historical truth – that many Native people fought against the American Revolution because they had suffered massacres by the settlers. In this depiction, Arnautoff goes beyond the radical murals of Anton Refregier in the Rincon Annex post office. Refregier shows native people doing the work for a California mission, with the Spanish padre who enslaved them in the background. That in itself contradicted the stereotype of the missions as happy places that brought European religion and culture to native people (for which Father Junipero Serra was recently beatified, when he should have been condemned).  

But Arnautoff goes further. He shows native people as active resisters to colonization, in their war-dress, ready to battle the settlers. Such resistance was the key to survival. Indigenous historian Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz, speaking of this resistance in California, says, “Without this resistance, there would be no descendants of the California Native peoples of the area colonized by the Spanish.”  

Exposing the resistance by both slaves and native people to the rebelling colonists in the American Revolutionary War is not just correcting history, but helps understand the present. Marxist historian Gerald Horne, in “The Counter Revolution of 1776”, charges, “Despite the alleged revolutionary and progressive impulse of 1776, the victors went on from there to crush indigenous polities, then moved overseas to do something similar in Hawaii, Cuba, and the Philippines, then unleashed its counter-revolutionary force in 20th-century Guatemala, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Indonesia, Angola, South Africa, Iran, Grenada, Nicaragua, and other tortured sites too numerous to mention.”

Arnautoff painted a critique of George Washington because of that history of slavery and genocide, so you can imagine how much opposition there was to it. It was the art of social realism, the same approach to art by artists in China and the Soviet Union after those revolutions, when artists believed that art had to take sides with workers and oppressed people, and tell social truth. Many artists who created socially committed art in the U.S. were later blacklisted in the 1950s for what was then called “subversive” art. That kind of art was suppressed – you won’t find it in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.  

Arnautoff belonged to the American Artists Congress, which was put on the Attorney General’s list of banned Communist/subversive organizations, and the San Francisco Artists and Writers Union. At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s he was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee. This was not long after the Committee sent ten screenwriters to prison for their radical politics, and the Hollywood blacklist denied work to many more. Arnautoff had a job teaching art at Stanford University and rightwing politicians tried to get him fired, which Stanford refused to do.  At the end of his life Arnautoff returned to the Soviet Union, where he continued his work as an artist, and died in Leningrad.

The school district, which is responsible for the mural, should have taught students about its politics – who it was defending and who it was attacking. If the students weren’t aware of this history, it’s in part because the school district didn’t do its job. Maybe it was afraid of the work’s radicalism, or simply didn’t know or understand the mural itself. The left in the Bay Area should also be self-critical for not having talked more about the mural and its message, helping to make students and their communities feel like they were being defended, rather than being alienated by the work, as so many said in their comments to the school board.

But painting over the mural doesn’t redress the historical crime that the mural shows – if anything, it covers up the critique of it, a goal the McCarthyites and their committees were never able to achieve.  Painting it over robs the students themselves – of the chance to discover and evaluate for themselves this history of struggle in the arts, of the chance to appreciate progressive art that tells the truth about our history, and of the chance to respond by making art and critiques of their own. If students are critical of Arnautoff himself, and point out blind spots he had, I’m sure he would have liked the idea.  He certainly didn’t consider his work some untouchable sacred object, but a tool to move forward the fight against racism and class exploitation, a fight in which he stood up for justice.

About the author

David Bacon

David Bacon is a Bay Area writer and photographer, and former union organizer. His latest book is In the Fields of the North / En los campos del norte (Colegio de la Frontera Norte/University of California Press, 2018). View all posts by David Bacon →

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8 thoughts on The Hidden History of the Arnautoff Mural

  1. Thank you David for your thoughtful essay about the Arnautoff murals. My wife and I are San Francisco media artists working under the name Book of Ours and we recently moved to Pittsburgh PA. We had just heard about the decision to destroy these murals last week. We both felt sickened on hearing the news. We felt that we needed to respond and created a video-essay called expulsion. We work from a leftist perspective and included that as part of our critique. Please have a look if you’re interested: https://youtu.be/om_LnJKGAE8

  2. I have a great deal of respect for the Stansbury Forum and its contributors, including David Bacon. But I disagree with the comments made so far regarding the Washington mural. The Arnautoff mural was a brilliant and subversive critique of Manifest Destiny and US imperialism when it was created. Displaying it in the 1930’s was a progressive act. But the primary question is, what is its impact now? We have to look at public art, financed and supported by a public entity, as an expression of the current values of that entity. Regardless of how progressive the work was in the context of the 1930’s, if we feel it is currently sending a negative message, inconsistent with the values of the diverse and inclusionary community we are striving to become, then it should be taken down. This is not censorship or McCarthyism; it is an important exercise in democracy as we’ve seen in the campaign against confederate statuary in the south, the renaming of public schools in California and similar efforts. Especially given that Native Americans are still being exploited, trafficked, and ripped off by the dominant culture, showing Indians being callously murdered by white soldiers is not appropriate for a public building in 2019, especially a school, regardless of who painted it and when. What are we saying to Native American students when every day they have to pass by the “dead Indian” in the hallway? Our priority should be responding to the effects on Native American students and the rest of the community, not responding to the impact on the artist’s place in history, genuine and important as that may be.

    However, I hope there is an alternative to destroying the mural. If possible, why not put it in a museum so it can be appreciated and analyzed through the lens of history. Isn’t that one of the functions of museums, to permit us to appreciate and examine art in its historical context? That would be an ideal solution.

  3. In addition to being tragic, the potential obliteration of the murals compounds the error of a kind of “tailist” “subjectivism,” that indicates a school board or a leadership …should bow to “feelings,” rather than celebrating the murals and contextualizing them, both about Arnautoff, his political loyalties & milieu, the WPA…. that the murals were intended to offer critical reflections on US history….

    Thank you, brother Bacon.

  4. The San Francisco School of the Blind, Also Known as George Washington High School

    “The mural [Victor Arnatauf] painted in the high school was a critique of earlier murals produced by the Pan American Exposition, an imperialist celebration and the World’s Fair on Treasure Island paid for by San Francisco’s wealthy elite.”
    — David Bacon, June 28, 2019

    By Rafael Pizarro

    © 2019

    If I close my eyes,
    I can see it all:
    the victorious rebel army,
    marching forward, driving natives,
    to a destiny made manifest by God,
    to those whom it would best convenience.
    I can see an enslaved man working,
    back turned to the heroes:
    a smaller rebellion, I think.

    And what will I see when I open my eyes?
    A new painter, perhaps, with a fresh approach.
    Looking over his shoulder, where I hoped
    to see a mighty throng containing an outrage,
    there is instead, a man kneeled in prayer,
    to the image of a God that might well be his double;
    where I expected pickets and bullhorns,
    I saw instead a policeman in blue, receiving a kiss
    from the mayor, and a medal was pinned to his chest;
    where I’d thought I’d see children in cages,
    praying to be saved, there is instead
    a committee of adults, considering the matter advisedly.

    His final touch, who’d never studied Rivera,
    was a classroom full of children saluting a flag,
    eyes open, eyes closed, seeing, in any event
    nothing at all.

  5. I, like brother David Bacon, have been deeply involved in the creation and interpretation of oppositional public art for all our lives, so we have skin in this game. What’s made this particular fight trickier than others are the voices of people of color – exactly the community one would expect to defend such imagery – arguing so deeply to obliterate it. David’s informed plea, among many – including a powerful video by Dewey Crumpler, the black artist who painted the supplemental murals years ago – all try to explain why this mural _should_ be supported, not trashed. But the play-it-safe school board, several of whom are POCs themselves, felt that that the few distressed voices of marginalized communities should determine the outcome. It’s a tragedy in many ways, and sets a dangerous precedent. There’s no perfect solution here, but I see it as a complex and challenging test of decisions regarding public art. The mural should not be destroyed. This struggle is not over.

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