Slave Ship is a political picture meant to compel the viewer to join the campaign for the abolition of slavery. Painted in 1840, just 7 short years after England had abolished, not just the slave trade, but the owning of slaves, the work of the abolitionist movement was not done.
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______Contents of this Video_______________________
00:00 - Introduction
00:09 - Judgement of Turner's The Slave Ship
01:53 - Continued Relevance of The Slave Ship
03:14 - Lines as judgement
04:25 - Color as Jury
06:22 - Color as Verdict
07:39 - Nature as Executioner
08:40 - The size brings us into the Court
09:13 - Perspective Declares Us Guilty
10:40 - Artist as Prosecutor
12:05 - The Zong Massacre
13:09 - The Trials
14:13 - Results on the Abolitionist movement
15:25 - First Exhibition of the Slave Ship
16:16 - Rockets and Blue Lights
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JMW Turner - The Slave Ship
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ArtArt historyArt History ResourcesClassical Conversations ResourcesCharlotte Mason ResourcesSonlight resourcesStory of the world resourcesHomeschool art history resourcesBeautiful Feet resourcesAP Art Historygrand tourJMW TurnerThe Slave ShipZong MassacreAbolition of SlaveryAbolitionJohn RuskinRockets and Blue LightsFallacies of HopeSlave ShipSlavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and DyingTyphoon Coming On