Tom Loftin Johnson (artist)

Major Tom Loftin Johnson (October 5, 1900 – June 25, 1963) was an American painter and an art learned at West Point. He created public murals – the largest of which was 70 feet (21 m) long. His American Pietà painting, which won $1,000 in the 1941 Carnegie International contest, was designed to stress the race problem in the United States. A Pietà is meant to show the Virgin Mary holding the crucified Jesus. In Johnson's American Pietà, the black mother holds her lynched son whilst others conceal his sorrowful body.

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