Painting – 1930s • Federal Programs for the Arts – Funding of art in post offices, schools and court houses – Artists – tend to lean left, support working class • John Reed Clubs • Artists’ Union (1934) – Art Front – Artists’ Union journal (1934-1937) – Some see cause as class struggle against capitalism – Some push for unions, not socialism – Most want federal art programs
Painting – 1930s. Federal Programs for the Arts Funding of art in post offices, schools and court houses Artists – tend to lean left, support working class John Reed Clubs Artists’ Union (1934) Art Front – Artists’ Union journal (1934-1937) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Painting – 1930s• Federal Programs for the Arts
– Funding of art in post offices, schools and court houses– Artists – tend to lean left, support working class
• John Reed Clubs• Artists’ Union (1934)
– Art Front – Artists’ Union journal (1934-1937)– Some see cause as class struggle against capitalism– Some push for unions, not socialism– Most want federal art programs
– Public Works of Art Project (PWAP - 1933) – Treasury Dept.– Replaced by Section of Painting and Sculpture in the Treasury Dept.
(1934)– Joins (1935) with Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP) and the Federal
Art Project of the Works Progress Administration (FAP/WPA) is created
– As of 1935 – Treasury Section and FAP/WPA– FAP/WPA – from 1935-1943, employs 1000s of artists – painters,
sculptors• Holger Cahill, director• Influenced by John Dewey• Art for all Americans, art “distinctly American”• Artists received weekly wage (3-5,000 employed)• Preference for representational, narrative art
• Treasury Section (not a relief organization – TRAP is)– Edward Bruce, director– Artists compete for work in federal buildings– Work approved ahead of time and monitored– Funds most murals, though FAP/WPA funds some
• Spent $2.5 million, created 1,100 murals, 300 sculptures– Face greater restrictions
• Given themes – local history, local industries, local flora and fauna, local pursuits, hunting and fishing, recreational activities
• Nudity and poverty prohibited, slavery largely excluded• Native Americans often depicted• Realism not stipulated, but expected• Regionalism/Social Realism
• Farm Security Administration (first called Resettlement Administration)– Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, etc.
• Mexican Muralists– Jose Orozco, David Siqueiros, and Diego Rivera– Many murals throughout US address concerns of many US