This dissertation examines how American art engaged new electronic media during the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, when techno-utopian desires for global harmony and interconnection surged throughout American culture, encouraged by the advent of the electromagnetic telegraph. While the fluid transmission of information over vast distances offered the democratic ideal of interconnectedness, its dematerialized process eluded public understanding. Responding to this tension, artists and craftsmen of the period adapted new communicative strategies and formal languages to traditional materials and modes of creative expression—from landscape and genre paintings to quilts and decorative desk sets—to help translate this elusive process i...