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Public Works of Art Project

The Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) was a New Deal work-relief program that employed professional artists to create sculptures, paintings, crafts and design for public buildings and parks during the Great Depression in the United States.[1][2] The program operated from December 8, 1933, to May 20, 1934,[3] administered by Edward Bruce under the United States Treasury Department, with funding from the Federal Emergency Relief Administration.

Public Works of Art Project

Negro Mother and Child (1934) by Maurice Glickman, commissioned by PWAP and installed at the Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building in 1940
Agency overview
FormedDecember 8, 1933 (1933-12-08)
DissolvedMay 20, 1934
Parent agencyUnited States Department of the Treasury

Although the program lasted less than one year, it had employed 3,749 artists, who produced 15,663 works of art.[4][5] In an art exhibition that featured 451 paintings commissioned by the PWAP, 30 percent of the artists featured were in their twenties, and 25 percent were first-generation immigrants.[5] The PWAP served as way to employ artists, while having competent representatives of the profession create work for display work in a public setting.[4] According to one news report at the PWAP show at MoMA, "The artists selected for the program were chosen on the basis of their artistic qualifications and their need of employment. The subject assigned to them was the American scene in all its phases."[6]

Overview and purpose edit

 
Edward Bruce, Eleanor Roosevelt, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury L. W. Robert Jr., and Forbes Watson look at a map of PWAP's 16 regional districts after the project was announced in December 1933.

The purpose of the Public Works of Art Project was "to give work to artists by arranging to have competent representatives of the profession embellish public buildings."[7] Artworks from the project were shown or incorporated into a variety of locations, including the White House and the House of Representatives.[7] Artists were paid an average of $75.59 per artwork, and the PWAP used a total of $1,184,400 to pay artists for their work.[8] Participants were required to be professional artists, and in total, 3,749 artists were hired, and 15,663 works were produced:[8] 7,000 easel paintings; 700 mural projects; 750 sculptures; and 2500 works of graphic art were commissioned by the PWAP.[9]

The PWAP sought to produce images focused on the "American Scene", and commissioned paintings and murals that depicted "optimistic visions of America during a time of economic desperation."[10] However, many artists disliked the idea of creating art that focused only on the positive aspects of living in America, as people were still experiencing dire hardships and personal tragedies from the Great Depression.[10] This created a community of PWAP artists who aspired to create artworks depicting both the "haves" and "have nots" of America, referred to as Social Realists.

The short-lived Public Works of Art Project was a prototype for later federal art programs, including the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Subsequent visual art programs administered by the Treasury Department were the Section of Painting and Sculpture and the Treasury Relief Art Project, both of which employed artists to decorate federal buildings throughout the U.S.[2]

History edit

 
Photograph of the regional directors and Washington, D.C., administrative staff of the Public Works of Art Project (1934)
 
Regional map, Public Works of Art Project

The vision and advocacy of artists George Biddle and Edward Bruce are credited for the creation and management of the New Deal art programs of the United States Department of the Treasury. On May 9, 1933, Biddle wrote a letter to newly elected President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposing that the U.S. government designate funds for murals in federal buildings "to improve the quality of American life". Roosevelt arranged for him to meet with L. W. Robert Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, who was responsible for the federal building construction program. At their June meeting, Biddle learned that funds had been approved to decorate the new Department of Justice and Post Office buildings in Washington, D.C., but that Congress was reluctant to have the appropriated funds spent on art. Biddle sent a proposal to a number of government officials, as well as Eleanor Roosevelt, who shared it with FDR. They both approved of the concept, as did Robert and architect Charles Louis Borie Jr., who designed the Justice building.[11] The proposal's greatest advocate was Ned Bruce, an artist as well as an expert on monetary policy who had joined the Treasury Department in 1932. In October 1933, Bruce had a series of gatherings at his home to discuss the possibility of government support for the visual arts. When the funding source was identified as the sticking point, Biddle and Bruce met with Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes, who administered the Public Works Administration. Ickes supported the art program that was proposed, and believed it could be funded by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, led by Harry L. Hopkins. Recognizing the value of a work-relief program for workers in the visual arts, Hopkins allocated $1 million in FERA funds to the program.[11]

On December 11, 1933, the Public Works of Art Project was approved and announced. "The project is expected to encourage and inspire artists to depict a permanent record of the times," reported The Washington Star. The program operated under the general supervision of Robert, advised by the Advisory Committee to the Treasury on Fine Arts. This group was made up of Charles Moore, chair of the Fine Arts Commission; Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Rexford Tugwell; Henry Hopkins; Henry T. Hunt of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration of Public Works; Frederic A. Delano, director of the National Capital Planning Commission, who chaired the committee; and Bruce, who was secretary. Art critic and writer Forbes Watson (1879–1960) served as the project's technical director.[12]

PWAP was organized into 16 regional districts headed by the following administrators:[13]

Notable works edit

Coit Tower murals edit

 
Murals inside Coit Tower

The first and largest of the projects sponsored by the PWAP were the murals in San Francisco's Coit Tower, begun in December 1933 and completed in June 1934. A total of 44 artists and assistants were employed, many of them faculty or former students of the California School of Fine Arts (CSFA). Among the lead artists were Maxine Albro, Victor Arnautoff, Jane Berlandina, Ray Bertrand, Roy Boynton, Ralph Chesse, Ben Cunningham, Rinaldo Cuneo, Harold Mallette Dean, Parker Hall, Edith Hamlin, George Albert Harris, William Hesthal, John Langley Howard, Lucien Labaudt, Gordon Langdon, Jose Moya del Pino, Otis Oldfield, Frederick E. Olmsted, Suzanne Scheuer, Ralph Stackpole, Edward Terada, Frede Vidar, Clifford Wight, and Bernard Zakheim.

After a majority of the murals were completed, the Big Strike of 1934 shut down the Pacific Coast. Though it has been claimed that allusions to the event were subversively included in the murals by some of the artists, in fact the murals were largely completed before the strike began and none of those that were not completed by that time show any reference to the strike.[14]

Griffith Observatory's Astronomers Monument edit

 
Astronomer's Monument at Griffith Observatory, 1934

The Astronomers Monument, commissioned by the Public Works of Art Project in 1933, sits outside of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, California. The Astronomers Monument was designed by Archibald Garner, and created by Garner and five other artists.[15] Each artist was responsible for sculpting one of the astronomers featured in the monument, and in total the monument features six influential astronomers: Hipparchus (about 150 BC);  Nicholas Copernicus (1473–1543); Galileo Galilei (1564–1642); Johannes Kepler (1571–1630); Isaac Newton (1642–1727); and William Herschel (1738–1822). One of the artists, George Stanley, was also the creator of the famous "Oscar" statuette presented at the Academy Awards.

On November 25, 1934, about six months prior to the opening of the Observatory, a celebration took place to mark the completion of the Astronomers Monument. The only "signature" on the Astronomers Monument is "PWAP 1934" referring to the program which funded the project and the year it was completed.

Muse of Music, Dance, Drama edit

 
Postcard of the Muse of Music, Dance, Drama monument, 1940

This Art Deco style monument serves as the gateway to the Hollywood Bowl, and is said to be the largest of hundreds of monuments in Southern California constructed during the New Deal.[16] The 200-foot long, 22-foot high sculpture is also a fountain and was constructed with concrete and covered with slabs of decorative granite.

The structure was completed in 1940 by George Stanley, also a contributor to the Griffith Observatory's Astronomers Monument and who is better known as the sculptor who molded the original Academy Awards' Oscar statue. The structure was refurbished in 2006.[17]

Selected easel paintings edit

 
Ray Strong, Golden Gate Bridge (California)
 
Charles Sheeler, Connecticut Barns (Pennsylvania)

Golden Gate Bridge edit

Golden Gate Bridge was commissioned by the Public Works of Art Project in 1934. The artist, Ray Strong, painted a depiction of the Golden Gate Bridge while it was under construction. Building the Golden Gate Bridge seemed impossible at the time it was built, due to the wind and overall complexity of the bridge design.[18] This painting was commissioned as a tribute to the engineering and design feats undertaken during the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge. This painting represents the American Idealism art style.[18]

Connecticut Barns edit

This 1934 painting was not recognized as being the work of Charles Sheeler until a General Services Administration art researcher found it in an Interior Department closet in 1983. It was not known that Sheeler had been employed by the Public Works of Art Project because the artist's name had been misspelled in government records. He was paid $221.85 for Connecticut Barns. Its title distinguishes it from a similar watercolor—Connecticut Barns in Landscape—measuring 4 by 5 inches, which is thought to be a study for this oil canvas.[19]

Additional works edit

Exhibitions edit

Los Angeles edit

An exhibition of Region 14 paintings and sculptures by 100 artists was presented March 11–25, 1934, at the Los Angeles Museum. Los Angeles Times critic Arthur Millier called the show a "Southern California Renaissance".[20] Some 300 pieces were shown; Millier mentioned the following as emblematic of the "young, vigorous, colorful, varied" product of the PWAP artists:

A report in the Los Angeles Post-Record said the show was drawing "huge crowds."[21]

Baltimore edit

The Baltimore Museum of Art showed works by 30 PWAP artists from April 1–21, 1934, including a painting of the waterfront by Charles H. Walther.[22] A second show was put on at the Maryland Institute in December 1934.[23]

Cincinnati edit

The Cincinnati Museum of Art hosted a PWAP show April 22 to 29, 1934, including drawings of local subjects by local artist Glen Tracy.[24]

Washington, D.C. edit

 
Millard Sheets, Tenement Flats (California)
 
Agnes Tait, Skating in Central Park (New York)
 
Carl Gustaf Nelson, Central Park (New York)

On Tuesday, April 24, 1934, FDR and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt attended the opening of National Exhibition of Art by the Public Works of Art Project,[25] a Corcoran Gallery of Art show of 500 pieces created by PWAP artists.[26] New York Times critic Edward Alden Jewell listed the following "smaller paintings" as those he wanted on the record as "especially successful":

The New York Times featured photographs of three other paintings: Central Park by Carl Gustaf Nelson, Family Quilting by Dorothea Tomlinson, and The Squall by Gerald Foster.[26]

About half of the pieces of art from the Corcoran show became part of a traveling show. The first stop was the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, where about 150 pieces where exhibited from September 19 to October 7.[27] MoMA selected Employment of Negroes in Agriculture for inclusion in their show; "Earle Richardson's lush portrayal of four black cotton workers was the sole painting by a black artist" included in the show, and the first-ever exhibition of black art at MoMA.[28] The Everhart Museum in Scranton, Pennsylvania hosted a further scaled-down version of this show from October 24 to 30, 1934, with an exhibit of 50 oil paintings and watercolors.[29][30]

 
Earle Richardson, Employment of Negroes in Agriculture

Birmingham edit

In June 1934, the Birmingham Public Library exhibited an oil painting of the Tannehill Furnace by Carrie Hill, a portrait of John Herbert Phillips by Mrs. Effie Gibson, and had received but had yet to display five prints by "Eastern" artists.[31]

Indianapolis edit

There was a PWAP show at the Herron Institute in Indiana in June 1934.[32]

Brooklyn edit

The Brooklyn Museum hosted a show in October 1934 of "31 contemporary artists, featuring accessions acquired through the Public Works of Art Project."[33]

Wilmington, Delaware edit

The Fine Arts Society of the Wilmington City Library put on a show of local PWAP art from October 15 to 27, 1934.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Public Works of Art Project. Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, December 8, 1933 – June 30, 1934. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1934. p. 1.
  2. ^ a b "Public Works of Art Project selected administrative and business records, 1933–1936". Archives of American Art. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  3. ^ Public Works of Art Project. Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, December 8, 1933 – June 30, 1934. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1934. p. 13.
  4. ^ a b provided by John R. Graham, Curator of Exhibits, Western Illinois University Art Gallery, 1 University Circle, Macomb, Illinois 61455
  5. ^ a b Brown, Elizabeth. . Smithsonian American Art Museum. Archived from the original on 18 March 2015. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
  6. ^ "PWA Art Work Shown at New York Museum, The Baltimore Sun 30 Sep 1934, page 65". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  7. ^ a b Brown, Elizabeth. . Smithsonian American Art Museum. Archived from the original on 18 March 2015. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Adler, Jerry (June 2009). "An Exhibition of Depression-Era Paintings by Federally-Funded Artists Provides a Hopeful View of Life during Economic Travails". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  9. ^ "Public Works of Art Project". Britannica. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Fogel, Jared (Fall 2001). "The Canvas Mirror: Painting as Politics in the New Deal". OAH Magazine of History. 16 (1): 17–25. doi:10.1093/maghis/16.1.17. JSTOR 25163482.
  11. ^ a b "WPA Art Collection". United States Department of the Treasury. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  12. ^ "Public Art Works Plans to Beautify Federal Buildings; 2,500 Artists to Be Employed Throughout the United States". The Evening Star. Washington, D.C. December 11, 1933. p. 1.
  13. ^ Public Works of Art Project. Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, December 8, 1933 – June 30, 1934. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1934. pp. 3–4.
  14. ^ Masha Zakheim, Coit Tower, San Francisco: Its History and Art, 2nd edn., 2009
  15. ^ "Astronomers Monument & Sundial". Griffith Observatory. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  16. ^ "Muse of Music, Dance, Drama | LA County Arts Commission". www.lacountyarts.org. 10 October 2016. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  17. ^ Pool, Bob (2006-06-20). "Getting a Splash From the Past". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  18. ^ a b "Golden Gate Bridge". Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  19. ^ Conroy, Sarah Booth (August 10, 1983). "GSA Finds Lost Sheeler Canvas". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  20. ^ Millier, Arthur (1934-03-11). "Federal Art Exhibition on Today as Museum Reopens: Public Works Show of Paintings Sculpture Called Southland Renaissance; Two Weeks Display". Los Angeles Times. p. 1. ProQuest 163195140.
  21. ^ "Los Angeles Evening Post-Record 12 Mar 1934, page 5". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  22. ^ "Three Important Exhibitions to Open at the Museum, The Baltimore Sun 01 Apr 1934, page 56". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  23. ^ "The Baltimore Sun 23 Dec 1934, page 52". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  24. ^ "The Cincinnati Enquirer 22 Apr 1934, page Page 51". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  25. ^ "Public Works of Art Project articles and exhibition catalog, 1933-1934 | Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution". www.aaa.si.edu. Retrieved 2023-02-14.
  26. ^ a b Jewell, Edward Alden (1934-04-29). "THE REALM OF ART: THE PUBLIC WORKS OF ART PROJECT; IN A NATIONAL MIRROR". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-14.
  27. ^ "Oakland Tribune 29 Apr 1934, page Page 34". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  28. ^ "The Artist Wasn't Present: On MoMA's Fumbled First Showing of Black American Art". ARTnews.com. 2019-07-17. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  29. ^ "The Tribune 04 Oct 1934, page Page 10". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  30. ^ "Public Works Art Exhibit at Museum, The Tribune, 24 Oct 1934, page 6". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  31. ^ "Music and Art Notes". The Birmingham News. 1934-06-24. p. 27. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  32. ^ "The Indianapolis Star 24 Jun 1934, page Page 52". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  33. ^ "The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 21 Oct 1934, page 30". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  34. ^ "The News Journal 10 Oct 1934, page 13". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.

Further reading edit

  • Contreras, Belisario R. (1983). Tradition and Innovation in New Deal Art. London and Toronto: Associated University Presses.
  • Fogel, Jared. (2001). "The Canvas Mirror: Painting as Politics in the New Deal." OAH Magazine of History. 16: 9.
  • Pohl, Frances K. (2008). Framing America. A Social History of American Art. New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28715-6.
  • Contreras, Belisario R. (1983). Tradition and Innovation in New Deal Art. London and Toronto: Associated University Presses.
  • O'Connor, Francis V., ed. (1973). Art for the Millions: Essays from the 1930s by Artists and Administrators of the WPA Federal Art Project. Boston: New York Graphic Society. ISBN 9780821204399.
  • is an exhibition featuring artworks from the Public Works of Art Project at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. This site contains a slide show, public programs, and recent news stories
  • Public Works of Art Project, video

External links edit

  • Smithsonian Museum of American Art: PWAP paintings Flickr album
  • Public Works of Art Project. Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, December 8, 1933 – June 30, 1934 (HathiTrust)
  • Living New Deal Project, a digital database of the lasting effects of the New Deal, Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley
  • New Deal Art Registry
  • 1934: A New Deal for Artists, a link to Anne Prentice Wagner's article, "1934: A New Deal for Artists" in the Spring 2009 issue of ' Antiques and Fine Art magazine.
  • Additional photographs of the Coit Tower murals by Maxine Albro, Victor Arnautoff, et al.

public, works, project, pwap, deal, work, relief, program, that, employed, professional, artists, create, sculptures, paintings, crafts, design, public, buildings, parks, during, great, depression, united, states, program, operated, from, december, 1933, 1934,. The Public Works of Art Project PWAP was a New Deal work relief program that employed professional artists to create sculptures paintings crafts and design for public buildings and parks during the Great Depression in the United States 1 2 The program operated from December 8 1933 to May 20 1934 3 administered by Edward Bruce under the United States Treasury Department with funding from the Federal Emergency Relief Administration Public Works of Art ProjectNegro Mother and Child 1934 by Maurice Glickman commissioned by PWAP and installed at the Stewart Lee Udall Department of the Interior Building in 1940Agency overviewFormedDecember 8 1933 1933 12 08 DissolvedMay 20 1934Parent agencyUnited States Department of the Treasury Although the program lasted less than one year it had employed 3 749 artists who produced 15 663 works of art 4 5 In an art exhibition that featured 451 paintings commissioned by the PWAP 30 percent of the artists featured were in their twenties and 25 percent were first generation immigrants 5 The PWAP served as way to employ artists while having competent representatives of the profession create work for display work in a public setting 4 According to one news report at the PWAP show at MoMA The artists selected for the program were chosen on the basis of their artistic qualifications and their need of employment The subject assigned to them was the American scene in all its phases 6 Contents 1 Overview and purpose 2 History 3 Notable works 3 1 Coit Tower murals 3 2 Griffith Observatory s Astronomers Monument 3 3 Muse of Music Dance Drama 3 4 Selected easel paintings 3 4 1 Golden Gate Bridge 3 4 2 Connecticut Barns 3 4 3 Additional works 4 Exhibitions 4 1 Los Angeles 4 2 Baltimore 4 3 Cincinnati 4 4 Washington D C 4 5 Birmingham 4 6 Indianapolis 4 7 Brooklyn 4 8 Wilmington Delaware 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOverview and purpose edit nbsp Edward Bruce Eleanor Roosevelt Assistant Secretary of the Treasury L W Robert Jr and Forbes Watson look at a map of PWAP s 16 regional districts after the project was announced in December 1933 The purpose of the Public Works of Art Project was to give work to artists by arranging to have competent representatives of the profession embellish public buildings 7 Artworks from the project were shown or incorporated into a variety of locations including the White House and the House of Representatives 7 Artists were paid an average of 75 59 per artwork and the PWAP used a total of 1 184 400 to pay artists for their work 8 Participants were required to be professional artists and in total 3 749 artists were hired and 15 663 works were produced 8 7 000 easel paintings 700 mural projects 750 sculptures and 2500 works of graphic art were commissioned by the PWAP 9 The PWAP sought to produce images focused on the American Scene and commissioned paintings and murals that depicted optimistic visions of America during a time of economic desperation 10 However many artists disliked the idea of creating art that focused only on the positive aspects of living in America as people were still experiencing dire hardships and personal tragedies from the Great Depression 10 This created a community of PWAP artists who aspired to create artworks depicting both the haves and have nots of America referred to as Social Realists The short lived Public Works of Art Project was a prototype for later federal art programs including the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration WPA Subsequent visual art programs administered by the Treasury Department were the Section of Painting and Sculpture and the Treasury Relief Art Project both of which employed artists to decorate federal buildings throughout the U S 2 History edit nbsp Photograph of the regional directors and Washington D C administrative staff of the Public Works of Art Project 1934 nbsp Regional map Public Works of Art Project The vision and advocacy of artists George Biddle and Edward Bruce are credited for the creation and management of the New Deal art programs of the United States Department of the Treasury On May 9 1933 Biddle wrote a letter to newly elected President Franklin D Roosevelt proposing that the U S government designate funds for murals in federal buildings to improve the quality of American life Roosevelt arranged for him to meet with L W Robert Jr Assistant Secretary of the Treasury who was responsible for the federal building construction program At their June meeting Biddle learned that funds had been approved to decorate the new Department of Justice and Post Office buildings in Washington D C but that Congress was reluctant to have the appropriated funds spent on art Biddle sent a proposal to a number of government officials as well as Eleanor Roosevelt who shared it with FDR They both approved of the concept as did Robert and architect Charles Louis Borie Jr who designed the Justice building 11 The proposal s greatest advocate was Ned Bruce an artist as well as an expert on monetary policy who had joined the Treasury Department in 1932 In October 1933 Bruce had a series of gatherings at his home to discuss the possibility of government support for the visual arts When the funding source was identified as the sticking point Biddle and Bruce met with Secretary of the Interior Harold L Ickes who administered the Public Works Administration Ickes supported the art program that was proposed and believed it could be funded by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration led by Harry L Hopkins Recognizing the value of a work relief program for workers in the visual arts Hopkins allocated 1 million in FERA funds to the program 11 On December 11 1933 the Public Works of Art Project was approved and announced The project is expected to encourage and inspire artists to depict a permanent record of the times reported The Washington Star The program operated under the general supervision of Robert advised by the Advisory Committee to the Treasury on Fine Arts This group was made up of Charles Moore chair of the Fine Arts Commission Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Rexford Tugwell Henry Hopkins Henry T Hunt of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration of Public Works Frederic A Delano director of the National Capital Planning Commission who chaired the committee and Bruce who was secretary Art critic and writer Forbes Watson 1879 1960 served as the project s technical director 12 PWAP was organized into 16 regional districts headed by the following administrators 13 Region 1 Francis H Taylor director Worcester Art Museum Region 2 Juliana R Force director Whitney Museum of American Art Region 3 Fiske Kimball director Pennsylvania Museum of Art Region 4 Duncan Phillips director Phillips Memorial Gallery Region 5 J J Haverty president High Museum of Art Region 6 Ellsworth Woodward director Isaac Delgado Museum of Art president of the Southern States Art League Region 7 Louis La Beaume president City Art Museum of St Louis Region 8 Homer Saint Gaudens director Carnegie Institute Region 9 William M Milliken director Cleveland Museum of Art Region 10 Walter S Brewster Region 11 George H Williamson Colorado chapter president American Institute of Architects Region 12 John S Ankeney director Dallas Art Association Region 13 Jesse L Nusbaum Region 14 Merle Armitage Southern California regional director Region 15 Walter Heil director California Palace of the Legion of Honor Region 16 Burt Brown Barker University of OregonNotable works editCoit Tower murals edit nbsp Murals inside Coit Tower The first and largest of the projects sponsored by the PWAP were the murals in San Francisco s Coit Tower begun in December 1933 and completed in June 1934 A total of 44 artists and assistants were employed many of them faculty or former students of the California School of Fine Arts CSFA Among the lead artists were Maxine Albro Victor Arnautoff Jane Berlandina Ray Bertrand Roy Boynton Ralph Chesse Ben Cunningham Rinaldo Cuneo Harold Mallette Dean Parker Hall Edith Hamlin George Albert Harris William Hesthal John Langley Howard Lucien Labaudt Gordon Langdon Jose Moya del Pino Otis Oldfield Frederick E Olmsted Suzanne Scheuer Ralph Stackpole Edward Terada Frede Vidar Clifford Wight and Bernard Zakheim After a majority of the murals were completed the Big Strike of 1934 shut down the Pacific Coast Though it has been claimed that allusions to the event were subversively included in the murals by some of the artists in fact the murals were largely completed before the strike began and none of those that were not completed by that time show any reference to the strike 14 Griffith Observatory s Astronomers Monument edit nbsp Astronomer s Monument at Griffith Observatory 1934 Main article Astronomers Monument The Astronomers Monument commissioned by the Public Works of Art Project in 1933 sits outside of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles California The Astronomers Monument was designed by Archibald Garner and created by Garner and five other artists 15 Each artist was responsible for sculpting one of the astronomers featured in the monument and in total the monument features six influential astronomers Hipparchus about 150 BC Nicholas Copernicus 1473 1543 Galileo Galilei 1564 1642 Johannes Kepler 1571 1630 Isaac Newton 1642 1727 and William Herschel 1738 1822 One of the artists George Stanley was also the creator of the famous Oscar statuette presented at the Academy Awards On November 25 1934 about six months prior to the opening of the Observatory a celebration took place to mark the completion of the Astronomers Monument The only signature on the Astronomers Monument is PWAP 1934 referring to the program which funded the project and the year it was completed Muse of Music Dance Drama edit nbsp Postcard of the Muse of Music Dance Drama monument 1940 This Art Deco style monument serves as the gateway to the Hollywood Bowl and is said to be the largest of hundreds of monuments in Southern California constructed during the New Deal 16 The 200 foot long 22 foot high sculpture is also a fountain and was constructed with concrete and covered with slabs of decorative granite The structure was completed in 1940 by George Stanley also a contributor to the Griffith Observatory s Astronomers Monument and who is better known as the sculptor who molded the original Academy Awards Oscar statue The structure was refurbished in 2006 17 Selected easel paintings edit nbsp Ray Strong Golden Gate Bridge California nbsp Charles Sheeler Connecticut Barns Pennsylvania Golden Gate Bridge edit Golden Gate Bridge was commissioned by the Public Works of Art Project in 1934 The artist Ray Strong painted a depiction of the Golden Gate Bridge while it was under construction Building the Golden Gate Bridge seemed impossible at the time it was built due to the wind and overall complexity of the bridge design 18 This painting was commissioned as a tribute to the engineering and design feats undertaken during the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge This painting represents the American Idealism art style 18 Connecticut Barns edit This 1934 painting was not recognized as being the work of Charles Sheeler until a General Services Administration art researcher found it in an Interior Department closet in 1983 It was not known that Sheeler had been employed by the Public Works of Art Project because the artist s name had been misspelled in government records He was paid 221 85 for Connecticut Barns Its title distinguishes it from a similar watercolor Connecticut Barns in Landscape measuring 4 by 5 inches which is thought to be a study for this oil canvas 19 Additional works edit nbsp Kenneth M Adams Juan Duran New Mexico nbsp Dewey Albinson Northern Minnesota Minnesota nbsp Ivan Albright The Farmer s Kitchen Illinois nbsp Bernard Badura Quarry at New Hope Pennsylvania nbsp Laverne Nelson Black Jicarilla Apache Fiesta New Mexico nbsp Norman S Chamberlain Corn Dance Taos Pueblo California nbsp George A Danchuk Aircraft No 5 Ohio nbsp Ross Dickinson Valley Farms California nbsp Arthur Durston Industry California nbsp Claire Falkenstein Inside a Lumber Mill California nbsp Gerald Sargent Foster Racing New Jersey nbsp Harry Louis Freund Clinton Mo Missouri nbsp Lily Furedi Subway New York nbsp Lloyd Goff Suburban Apartments New York nbsp Z Vanessa Helder Alki Point Lighthouse Washington nbsp Ernest Martin Hemmings Homeward Bound New Mexico nbsp Louis Hirshman The Factory Pennsylvania nbsp Catherine M Howell Oyster Shuckers Louisiana nbsp Rowland Lyon Georgetown Waterfront Washington D C nbsp Ila Mae McAfee Mountain Lions New Mexico nbsp Frank Mechau Horses at Night Colorado nbsp Abram Molarsky The Storm New Jersey nbsp Ernest Ralph Norling The Timber Bucker Washington nbsp John T Robertson Old Man River Iowa nbsp William S Schwartz Americana No 2 Illinois nbsp Gale Stockwell Parkville Main Street Missouri nbsp Elizabeth F Summers Untitled Missouri nbsp Charles W Ward Industry New Jersey nbsp Santos Zingale Lynch Law Wisconsin nbsp Anonymous Underpass Binghamton New York New York Exhibitions editLos Angeles edit An exhibition of Region 14 paintings and sculptures by 100 artists was presented March 11 25 1934 at the Los Angeles Museum Los Angeles Times critic Arthur Millier called the show a Southern California Renaissance 20 Some 300 pieces were shown Millier mentioned the following as emblematic of the young vigorous colorful varied product of the PWAP artists CCC Workers bas relief Donal Hord later installed South Pasadena Junior High The Law Archibald Garner later installed Spring Street Courthouse Indian Girl Eugenia Everett Three lovely figures Ada May Sharpless Decorative panels by Arthur Ames James Redmond William P Everett Conrad Buff Paintings by Kim Clarke of ships and railroads Watercolors by James Couper Wright Joseph DeMers Milford Zornes and Everett L Bryant A report in the Los Angeles Post Record said the show was drawing huge crowds 21 Baltimore edit The Baltimore Museum of Art showed works by 30 PWAP artists from April 1 21 1934 including a painting of the waterfront by Charles H Walther 22 A second show was put on at the Maryland Institute in December 1934 23 Cincinnati edit The Cincinnati Museum of Art hosted a PWAP show April 22 to 29 1934 including drawings of local subjects by local artist Glen Tracy 24 Washington D C edit nbsp Millard Sheets Tenement Flats California nbsp Agnes Tait Skating in Central Park New York nbsp Carl Gustaf Nelson Central Park New York On Tuesday April 24 1934 FDR and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt attended the opening of National Exhibition of Art by the Public Works of Art Project 25 a Corcoran Gallery of Art show of 500 pieces created by PWAP artists 26 New York Times critic Edward Alden Jewell listed the following smaller paintings as those he wanted on the record as especially successful Tenement Flats by Millard Sheets San Pedro Harbor by Paul Starrett Vendue by Robert Tabor Old Baltimore Waterfront by Herman Maril Barge Dock by Erle Loran Old Pennsylvania Farm by A E Cederquist Wikidata New England House by H A Coon Spring Plowing by Helen Dickson Waterfront Scene by Pino Lanni The Young Artist by Gertrude A Lambert Winter Afternoon Central Park by Agnes Tait The Snow Shovelers by Jacob Getlar Smith Paper Workers by Douglass Crockwell Interior by Josephine Wupper The Covered Bridge by Ivan Hoon The New York Times featured photographs of three other paintings Central Park by Carl Gustaf Nelson Family Quilting by Dorothea Tomlinson and The Squall by Gerald Foster 26 About half of the pieces of art from the Corcoran show became part of a traveling show The first stop was the Museum of Modern Art in New York City where about 150 pieces where exhibited from September 19 to October 7 27 MoMA selected Employment of Negroes in Agriculture for inclusion in their show Earle Richardson s lush portrayal of four black cotton workers was the sole painting by a black artist included in the show and the first ever exhibition of black art at MoMA 28 The Everhart Museum in Scranton Pennsylvania hosted a further scaled down version of this show from October 24 to 30 1934 with an exhibit of 50 oil paintings and watercolors 29 30 nbsp Earle Richardson Employment of Negroes in Agriculture Birmingham edit In June 1934 the Birmingham Public Library exhibited an oil painting of the Tannehill Furnace by Carrie Hill a portrait of John Herbert Phillips by Mrs Effie Gibson and had received but had yet to display five prints by Eastern artists 31 Indianapolis edit There was a PWAP show at the Herron Institute in Indiana in June 1934 32 Brooklyn edit The Brooklyn Museum hosted a show in October 1934 of 31 contemporary artists featuring accessions acquired through the Public Works of Art Project 33 Wilmington Delaware edit The Fine Arts Society of the Wilmington City Library put on a show of local PWAP art from October 15 to 27 1934 34 See also editSection of Painting and Sculpture 1934 1943 Treasury Relief Art Project 1935 1938 Federal Art Project 1935 1943 References edit Public Works of Art Project Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator December 8 1933 June 30 1934 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1934 p 1 a b Public Works of Art Project selected administrative and business records 1933 1936 Archives of American Art Retrieved February 13 2023 Public Works of Art Project Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator December 8 1933 June 30 1934 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1934 p 13 a b provided by John R Graham Curator of Exhibits Western Illinois University Art Gallery 1 University Circle Macomb Illinois 61455 a b Brown Elizabeth 1934 A New Deal for Artists Smithsonian American Art Museum Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved May 1 2022 PWA Art Work Shown at New York Museum The Baltimore Sun 30 Sep 1934 page 65 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 a b Brown Elizabeth 1934 A New Deal for Artists Smithsonian American Art Museum Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved May 1 2022 a b Adler Jerry June 2009 An Exhibition of Depression Era Paintings by Federally Funded Artists Provides a Hopeful View of Life during Economic Travails Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved May 10 2022 Public Works of Art Project Britannica Retrieved May 10 2022 a b Fogel Jared Fall 2001 The Canvas Mirror Painting as Politics in the New Deal OAH Magazine of History 16 1 17 25 doi 10 1093 maghis 16 1 17 JSTOR 25163482 a b WPA Art Collection United States Department of the Treasury Retrieved February 14 2023 Public Art Works Plans to Beautify Federal Buildings 2 500 Artists to Be Employed Throughout the United States The Evening Star Washington D C December 11 1933 p 1 Public Works of Art Project Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator December 8 1933 June 30 1934 Washington D C Government Printing Office 1934 pp 3 4 Masha Zakheim Coit Tower San Francisco Its History and Art 2nd edn 2009 Astronomers Monument amp Sundial Griffith Observatory Retrieved May 10 2022 Muse of Music Dance Drama LA County Arts Commission www lacountyarts org 10 October 2016 Retrieved 2018 04 27 Pool Bob 2006 06 20 Getting a Splash From the Past Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 2018 04 27 a b Golden Gate Bridge Retrieved May 8 2022 Conroy Sarah Booth August 10 1983 GSA Finds Lost Sheeler Canvas The Washington Post Retrieved August 8 2022 Millier Arthur 1934 03 11 Federal Art Exhibition on Today as Museum Reopens Public Works Show of Paintings Sculpture Called Southland Renaissance Two Weeks Display Los Angeles Times p 1 ProQuest 163195140 Los Angeles Evening Post Record 12 Mar 1934 page 5 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 Three Important Exhibitions to Open at the Museum The Baltimore Sun 01 Apr 1934 page 56 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 21 The Baltimore Sun 23 Dec 1934 page 52 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 21 The Cincinnati Enquirer 22 Apr 1934 page Page 51 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 21 Public Works of Art Project articles and exhibition catalog 1933 1934 Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution www aaa si edu Retrieved 2023 02 14 a b Jewell Edward Alden 1934 04 29 THE REALM OF ART THE PUBLIC WORKS OF ART PROJECT IN A NATIONAL MIRROR The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 14 Oakland Tribune 29 Apr 1934 page Page 34 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 The Artist Wasn t Present On MoMA s Fumbled First Showing of Black American Art ARTnews com 2019 07 17 Retrieved 2023 02 22 The Tribune 04 Oct 1934 page Page 10 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 Public Works Art Exhibit at Museum The Tribune 24 Oct 1934 page 6 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 Music and Art Notes The Birmingham News 1934 06 24 p 27 Retrieved 2023 02 21 The Indianapolis Star 24 Jun 1934 page Page 52 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 21 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 21 Oct 1934 page 30 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 21 The News Journal 10 Oct 1934 page 13 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 02 22 Further reading editContreras Belisario R 1983 Tradition and Innovation in New Deal Art London and Toronto Associated University Presses Fogel Jared 2001 The Canvas Mirror Painting as Politics in the New Deal OAH Magazine of History 16 9 Pohl Frances K 2008 Framing America A Social History of American Art New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28715 6 Contreras Belisario R 1983 Tradition and Innovation in New Deal Art London and Toronto Associated University Presses O Connor Francis V ed 1973 Art for the Millions Essays from the 1930s by Artists and Administrators of the WPA Federal Art Project Boston New York Graphic Society ISBN 9780821204399 1934 A New Deal for Artists is an exhibition featuring artworks from the Public Works of Art Project at the Smithsonian American Art Museum This site contains a slide show public programs and recent news stories Public Works of Art Project videoExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Public Works of Art Project Smithsonian Museum of American Art PWAP paintings Flickr album Public Works of Art Project Report of the Assistant Director of the Treasury to Federal Emergency Relief Administrator December 8 1933 June 30 1934 HathiTrust Living New Deal Project a digital database of the lasting effects of the New Deal Department of Geography University of California Berkeley New Deal Art Registry 1934 A New Deal for Artists a link to Anne Prentice Wagner s article 1934 A New Deal for Artists in the Spring 2009 issue of Antiques and Fine Art magazine Additional photographs of the Coit Tower murals by Maxine Albro Victor Arnautoff et al Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public Works of Art Project amp oldid 1148755029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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