From The Living New Deal <[email protected]>
Subject The Fireside: The Eye of the Beholder
Date November 2, 2022 12:59 AM
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NOVEMBER 2022


** The Eye of the Beholder ([link removed])
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The Federal Art Project (FAP), (1935-1943), provided jobs to 10,000 struggling artists. They created thousands of artworks, including roughly 2,500 murals that adorn many public buildings—city halls, schools, post offices—to this day. The FAP muralists were encouraged to depict American life and culture so as to inspire and promote a national identity. But the results were not without controversy. Then, as now, America was ideologically and culturally divided. FDR proclaimed public art as a hallmark of democracy. Nearly nine decades later, the meaning of art—and democracy—is in the eye of the beholder.


** [link removed] Victory for Public Art ([link removed])
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** By Kate B. Littleboy

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WPA artist Victor Arnautoff’s mural series at a San Francisco high school has been a lightning rod for controversy ever since it was completed in 1936. “Life of Washington" narrowly survived a recent challenge when critics demanded that the school board “Paint it down.” READ MORE ([link removed])
HAPPENINGS
A Benefit for the Living New Deal
Thursday, November 10, 2022, 6:45 pm PST
The Roxie, San Francisco’s Iconic Nonprofit Cinema
"TOWN DESTROYER" ([link removed])
A Film by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow

The mural, "Life of Washington,” at George Washington High School became a media firestorm when some students and parents demanded that the Board of Education destroy the New Deal-era artwork for what they say are “racist” images. A panel discussion and audience Q&A follow the screening. Ticket sales benefit the Living New Deal. The Roxie, 3117 16th Street, San Francisco. TICKETS & INFORMATION ([link removed]-)
GIVING TUESDAY ([link removed])
Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Giving Tuesday is an annual "global generosity movement” on the first Tuesday after Thanksgiving. It encourages us all to support the organizations that contribute to the betterment of our communities. As 2022 comes to the close, please consider including the Living New Deal in your year-end charitable giving plan. Your gift makes our work possible. We are grateful for your support. DONATE ([link removed])

Living New Deal Webinars
via Zoom

[link removed]

Painting the Mail: Post Office Art of the New Deal ([link removed])
Tuesday, November 15, 2022, 5pm-6pm PST (8pm EST)
with Barbara Bernstein
The New Deal didn’t just decorate post offices. It celebrated them. Murals, bas reliefs and sculptures depict letters being written, mailed, sorted, transported, delivered, read and shared. These artworks are increasingly imperiled as post offices are sold and repurposed. Barbara Bernstein, the Living New Deal's Public Art Specialist and founder of the New Deal Art Registry, offers a vision for the reuse of these buildings that preserves both the artworks and the sense of community that post offices can provide. Free. REGISTER ([link removed])
"TOWN DESTROYER" ([link removed]-)
with filmmakers Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow
Tuesday, November 29, 2022, 5pm PST

Victor Arnautoff’s mural, “Life of Washington,” has been debated for decades. Denounced as racist by some, others see it as a critique of America’s founding myths. What is the role of art in reflecting America to itself? Join the conversation. Free. REGISTER ([link removed]-)
[link removed]

Reality Makes Them Dream: Revisiting New Deal-Era Photography ([link removed])
with Josie Johnson and Emilia Mickevicius
Tuesday, December 6, 2022, 5pm-6pm PST

Photography from the New Deal-era is often associated with mirroring the bleak realities of the Great Depression. Yet, the photography is remarkably varied, using the raw material of the visible world as a point of departure for viewers’ imaginations. Join us as we examine how the works of WPA photographers like Sybil Anikeef, Sonya Noskowiak, Edward Weston and others complicate and add dimension to understanding art and culture in the US in the 1930s.
Josie Johnson, Ph.D. is the Capital Group Foundation Curatorial Fellow for Photography at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University. Emilia Mickevicius, Ph.D. is a photography historian and curator at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Free. REGISTER ([link removed])
NEW DEALISH
Dining with the Roosevelts ([link removed])
To show solidarity with those struggling during the Great Depression, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt eschewed fancy White House meals for more humble fare. Served on White House china, meals were wholesome, if not particularly appetizing, and penciled out at seven and a half cents per person, including coffee.READ MORE ([link removed])
Tell Us About Your Favorite New Deal Site

Does a shelf of books qualify as public works? ([link removed])
By David Kipen
My favorite WPA project isn't a road or a bridge or even a school. It's not a library, but you're getting warmer…READ MORE ([link removed])

Send us a first-person story of 100 (or so) words about your favorite New Deal site and why you chose it. Send your submissions to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) . Thanks!
THE NEW DEAL IN THE NEWS
Some links may limit access for nonsubscribers. Please support local journalism, if you can.

For Democrats, trying to slow climate change is good politics ([link removed])
Research suggests that co-sponsoring the Green New Deal helped in the 2020 elections. Could it boost incumbents’ votes in the 2022 midterms as well?
By Meagan Carmack, Nives Dolšak and Aseem Prakash
The Washington Post, July 15, 2022

Hell Hath No Fury. Like…FDR? ([link removed])
Winning every state except Maine and Vermont, Roosevelt believed he enjoyed a resounding mandate for his progressive initiatives, declaring in his 1937 inaugural address, “I see one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished,” he signaled a determination to push to obtain additional assistance for the poor and unemployed.
By John A. Riggs
Historynet.com, October 11, 2022

FDR built a ‘Great Wall of Trees.’ Could Biden do the same? ([link removed])
Three years into his presidency and five years into the Great Depression, Franklin Roosevelt asked destitute Great Plains farmers to stop growing wheat and start growing trees. Not just a few trees, but 220 million trees.
By Daniel Cusick
ClimateWire, August 26, 2022

Art Deco-style Chelsea mosaics a reminder of the needle trades ([link removed])
With the decline of manufacturing, Manhattan’s once bustling Garment District has largely been relegated to history. But at a WPA-built high school in Midtown, four mosaics illustrating different aspects of the needle trades are a window onto the past.
Ephemeral New York, October 11, 2022

‘Amsterdam’ Brings a Timely Reminder of a Coup Plot Against FDR ([link removed])
This strange, but sort of true, film centers on a political conspiracy in 1933 when Wall Street moguls sought to enlist the venerated U.S. Marine General Smedley Butler (Robert De Niro) to overthrow President Roosevelt.
By Michael Atkins
The Village Voice, October 10, 2022
FDR SAYS
“The arts cannot thrive except where men are free to be themselves and to be in charge of the discipline of their own energies and ardors. The conditions for democracy and for art are one and the same. What we call liberty in politics results in freedom in the arts. There can be no vitality in the works gathered in a museum unless there exists the right of spontaneous life in the society in which the arts are nourished.”
— FDR, Speaking at re-opening of the Museum of Modern Art, NY, 1939


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