Change of Shifts (Workplace), 1961, watercolor, gouache, and pencil on cream-colored paper, 21,6 x 28,3 cm
Change of Shifts (Workplace), 1961
The factory gates are open. In a scene defined by rapid change and movement, we can see the workers coming and going at the change of shift. The depiction of the bright and uncluttered workshop demonstrates the artist's knowledge of the functional context. Railway tracks run at an angle onto the page and draw our eye to the background, adding depth to the scene. Just inside the gates on the right is the product of industrial labor: the boiler with which the Eisenwerke Baumgarte ironworks were enjoying global business success. The production process is still underway. The light, bright colors of Baumgarte's watercolor technique present the factory in a positive way.
Between us and the entrance in the right half of the picture, a man is bent forward. The figure is not complete, and it is not entirely clear what he is doing. Probably, the aim is to depict the heavy manual labor that took place in these large workshops, which were not yet automated.
Interestingly, Ruth Baumgarte does not show individual, but shadowy figures; emphasizing the anonymity of work in industry. It is not the individual that counts, but the shared, common whole of Eisenwerke Baumgarte that is key to the functioning of the business.