New Deal Art
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A fresh and vibrant account of the USA's New Deal art programmes,
highlighting diversity, activism, social justice, and urgent
lessons for today.Franklin D. Roosevelt’s landslide victory in the
USA's 1932 presidential election gave him a mandate to institute a
'New Deal' for US citizens, and by so doing offer them 'a more
abundant life'. For a decade between 1933 and 1943 the New Deal art
programs marked the largest federal investment in the arts in the
history of the country. Tens of thousands of artists and artisans
across the country produced some 2,500 murals, 100,000 easel
paintings, 17,000 sculptures, and 200,000 prints. How should we
understand the history and legacy of the New Deal art programs
today? Marshalling new scholarship and original research, New Deal
Art highlights the contributions of a diverse range of women,
immigrant, working class, Indigenous, Black, Asian, Jewish, Latinx
and LGBTQ+ artists. While previous studies have focused on the
personalities and politics of government administrators, this book
offers a 'history from below' that stresses the role of artists as
activists through collective efforts such as the Artists Union and
the American Artists Congress. It explores topics that
traditionally fall outside the purview of art history: art as
therapy in prisons and hospitals, children’s art, community art
centres and art education, and the place of handicrafts and applied
arts. Above all, New Deal Art centres the question of art and
democracy: What if art was treated as a natural resource to which
all citizens had an equal right?