New Deal Art Now offers a sampling of the breadth of the Works Progress Administration and Federal Art Projects (WPA/FAP), calling attention to the skills, histories, and social identities of an extraordinarily diverse spectrum of professional and amateur artists funded by the United States federal government during the Great Depression. The New Deal, a major economic stimulus initiative that ran from 1935-1943, included the Works Progress Administration Federal One Projects, encompassing fine art, music, theater, writing, and design. These projects provided economic support and cultural enrichment to hundreds of thousands of Americans, in the form of jobs, entertainment, and education in the arts. New Deal Art Now seeks to reframe a period...
In the 1930s, a surging interest in early American vernacular arts, collectively referred to as folk...
INTRODUCTION Progressive educational theories, many which had their roots in the late nineteenth cen...
Dated ca. 1930-1939, this photograph shows the Index of American Design artists at work, Mike DaDant...
This intellectual and cultural history chronicles the processes of compromise and negotiation betwee...
This research examines the historic precedent established during the depression era by federal patro...
As the first major, nationalized support system for artistic production in the United States, the Ne...
Traditionally, the years of the New Deal projects have been treated as a part of the Depression exp...
On the whole, the New Deal was a good deal for California, and San Francisco got the best of the bar...
This is a description of the exhibit of the New Deal art in South Carolina held at the SC State Muse...
With arts funding in the U.S. currently shaped largely by private donors and declining state and fed...
The thesis is an analysis of the creation, operation and eventual ending of the Federal Art Project,...
The number of Americans who did not suffer in some way from the depression of the thirties was small...
Original description reads: "Title: The Emperor's New Clothes; Artist: Harry Reunick; Medium: Silk S...
Dated ca. 1935-1939, this photograph shows a worker using a die stamping machine at the American Art...
This research project is the first comprehensive study to address the relations between modem art, l...
In the 1930s, a surging interest in early American vernacular arts, collectively referred to as folk...
INTRODUCTION Progressive educational theories, many which had their roots in the late nineteenth cen...
Dated ca. 1930-1939, this photograph shows the Index of American Design artists at work, Mike DaDant...
This intellectual and cultural history chronicles the processes of compromise and negotiation betwee...
This research examines the historic precedent established during the depression era by federal patro...
As the first major, nationalized support system for artistic production in the United States, the Ne...
Traditionally, the years of the New Deal projects have been treated as a part of the Depression exp...
On the whole, the New Deal was a good deal for California, and San Francisco got the best of the bar...
This is a description of the exhibit of the New Deal art in South Carolina held at the SC State Muse...
With arts funding in the U.S. currently shaped largely by private donors and declining state and fed...
The thesis is an analysis of the creation, operation and eventual ending of the Federal Art Project,...
The number of Americans who did not suffer in some way from the depression of the thirties was small...
Original description reads: "Title: The Emperor's New Clothes; Artist: Harry Reunick; Medium: Silk S...
Dated ca. 1935-1939, this photograph shows a worker using a die stamping machine at the American Art...
This research project is the first comprehensive study to address the relations between modem art, l...
In the 1930s, a surging interest in early American vernacular arts, collectively referred to as folk...
INTRODUCTION Progressive educational theories, many which had their roots in the late nineteenth cen...
Dated ca. 1930-1939, this photograph shows the Index of American Design artists at work, Mike DaDant...