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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

The Wal-Mart Biennale

By Rebecca Solnit, Tomdispatch.com. Posted February 23, 2006.


The Walton billionaires hope their new museum will connect them to high culture and history -- ideals a long way from the soulless box of a Wal-Mart store.

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It isn't that, when Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton purchased Asher B. Durand's 1849 painting Kindred Spirits last year, she got the state of Arkansas to pass legislation specifically to save her taxes -- in this case, about $3 million on a purchase price of $35 million. It isn't that the world's second richest woman and ninth richest person (according to a Forbes magazine 2005 estimate) scooped the painting out from under the National Gallery and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which had banded together to try to keep it in a public collection when the New York Public Library decided to sell it off. It isn't that Walton will eventually stick this talisman of New England cultural life and a lot of other old American paintings in the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, the Walton family museum she's building in Bentonville, Arkansas, the site of Wal-Mart's corporate headquarters -- after all people in the middle of the country should get to see some good art too.

It might not even be, as Wal-MartWatch.com points out, that the price of the painting equals what the state of Arkansas spends every two years providing for Wal-Mart's 3,971 employees on public assistance; or that the average Wal-Mart cashier makes $7.92 an hour and, since Wal Mart likes to keep people on less than full-time schedules, works only 29 hours a week for an annual income of $11,948--so a Wal-Mart cashier would have to work a little under 3,000 years to earn the price of the painting without taking any salary out for food, housing, or other expenses (and a few hundred more years to pay the taxes, if the state legislature didn't exempt our semi-immortal worker).

The trouble lies in what the painting means and what Alice Walton and her $18 billion mean. Art patronage has always been a kind of money-laundering, a pretty public face for fortunes made in uglier ways. The superb Rockefeller folk art collections in several American museums don't include paintings of the 1914 Ludlow Massacre of miners in Colorado, carried out by Rockefeller goons, and the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles doesn't say a thing about oil. But something about Wal-Mart and Kindred Spirits is more peculiar than all the robber barons and their chapels, galleries, and collections ever were, perhaps because, more than most works of art, Durand's painting is a touchstone for a set of American ideals that Wal-Mart has been savaging.

It may be true that, in an era when oil companies regularly take out advertisements proclaiming their commitment to environmentalism, halting global warming, promoting petroleum alternatives, and conservation measures, while many of them also fund arguments against climate change's very existence, nothing is too contrary to embrace. But Kindred Spirits is older, more idealistic, and more openly at odds with this age than most hostages to multinational image-making.

Kindred Spirits portrays Durand's friend, the great American landscape painter Thomas Cole, with his friend, the poet and editor William Cullen Bryant. The two stand on a projecting rock above a cataract in the Catskills, bathed like all the trees and air around them in golden light. The painting is about friendship freely given, including a sense of friendship, even passion, for the American landscape itself. In the work of Cole, Durand, and Bryant, as in the writing of Henry David Thoreau and Walt Whitman, you can see an emerging belief that the love of nature, beauty, truth, and freedom are naturally allied, a romantic vision that still lingers as one of the most idealistic versions of what it might mean to be an American.

Cole was almost the first American painter to see the possibilities in American landscapes, to see that meaning could grow rather than lessen in a place not yet full of ruins and historical associations, and so he became an advocate for wilderness nearly half a century before California rhapsodist and eventual Sierra Club cofounder John Muir took up the calling. Bryant had gained a reputation as a poet before he became editor-in-chief of the New York Evening Post and thereby a pivotal figure in the culture of the day. He defended a group of striking tailors in 1836, long before there was a union movement, and was ever after a champion of freedom and human rights, turning his newspaper into an antislavery mouthpiece and eventually becoming a founder of the Republican Party (back when that was the more progressive and less beholden of the two parties). He was an early supporter of Abraham Lincoln and of the projects that resulted in New York's Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum -- of a democratic urban culture that believed in the uplifting power of nature and of free access. Maybe the mutation of the Republican Party from Bryant's to Walton's time is measure enough of American weirdness; or maybe the details matter, of what the painting is and what Wal-Mart and its heiress are.


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Rebecca Solnit is the author of 'Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities'.

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damn, that made me sick.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Feb 23, 2006 4:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I should have waited to read that until this evening. Not a good way to start the day.

Take care everybody.

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It's the robber barons!
Posted by: ScottP on Feb 23, 2006 10:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bravo, thanks for an excellent article! I'll argue that anyone who has accumulated $100M or more (feel free to pick your own number) qualifies as a robber baron. There is no "he did it honestly" excuse. If you had that kind of money, how unimaginative would you have to be to not have thought of some good way to donate it when you got halfway there? So then, these immoral and unimaginative people have all the power that comes with such wealth? This is something the tax system should encourage? And what did Alice do to earn this, besides being in a family of crooks?

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The land of liberty?
Posted by: npmalk on Feb 23, 2006 11:40 AM   
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Isn't this yet another shining example of the selfish acts of conglomerant stockholders/business owners? While the author makes some teriffic points, what I find most appalling is how the state of Arkansas is willing to lose $3 million in taxes, in a state where teachers wages, healthcare, etc. are some of the lowest or worst in the US. We should be ashamed of ourselves for voting the people into office that we did.

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barbarab
Posted by: barbara baker on Feb 23, 2006 3:31 PM   
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Kudos to Rebecca Solnit for so skillfully conjoining art historical information and contemporary socio-economic analysis to present a coherent critique of the uses of art and the implications of art patronage in our society.

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A Little Bit of Arkansas History
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Feb 23, 2006 4:59 PM   
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I have been blessed, thank whatever Gods may be, with avoiding Greatness. Please allow me to explain.
I once saw Bill Clinton in Hope, Arkansas, where I used to live. He had come to bury his mother. I stood next to one of his Secret Service Agents and gave him the Heavy Metal Horns. Little finger and thumb. He just stared from the limosine. Typical response. Secrect Service guy didn't do shit.
Moved to Northwest Arkansas because of jobs. Wife found an ad for caretakers. Went to the interview in Bentonville, Arkansas. Woman doing the interview kept saying 'She expects this' and 'She expects that' without actually revelling who 'She' was.
It didn't dawn on me until we came out of the building who 'She' was. It was Alice Walton and the caretaking job was on her estate on Beaver Lake. I told my wife I would rather work for Satan and we went to have an ice cream at the local Sonic. Thank you, God, for preserving me from such Greatness!

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"High" culture
Posted by: willymack on Feb 23, 2006 5:59 PM   
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High culture my ass! this is slave state mentality, pure & simple.

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Quite a read
Posted by: otown on Feb 23, 2006 8:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just wanted to thank the author for a very detailed, impassioned critique of Wal-Mart and the peculiar virtues of the oligarchy.

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