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Well Met in the Subway

American Art Museum

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International media Interoperability Framework
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    Object Details

    Artist

    Kyra Markham, born Chicago, IL 1891-died Petion-Ville, Haiti 1967

    Printer

    George C. Miller, born New York City 1894-died Burlington, VT 1965

    Exhibition Label

    After studying drawing at the Art Institute of Chicago, Kyra Markham created artwork primarily to support her acting career. She first moved to New York City in 1913 and soon began working with theater companies across the country. She returned to visual art and to New York by 1929, painting murals and attending the Art Students League. The following decade, she experimented with lithography and created Social Realist prints depicting prosaic urban scenes imbued with social commentary. In this print, the subway is crowded with people, one of whom reads the Daily News, which reports a recent kidnapping. This detail adds a hint of danger and criminality to the subway's otherwise innocent and potentially humorous tangle of friends and strangers, similar to that seen nearby in Lamar Baker's prints Sadist and Pyromaniac.

    Credit Line

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Ben and Beatrice Goldstein Foundation, Inc. and museum purchase

    Date

    1937

    Object number

    1974.7.4

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    Graphic Arts-Print

    Medium

    lithograph on paper

    Dimensions

    image: 9 1/4 x 10 in. (23.4 x 25.3 cm)

    See more items in

    Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection

    Department

    Graphic Arts

    Data Source

    Smithsonian American Art Museum

    Topic

    Figure group
    Recreation\leisure\reading
    Recreation\leisure\conversation
    Architecture\vehicle\subway
    Object\written matter\newspaper

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk75baf9bc5-dfe2-4811-9131-eab833479dd4

    Record ID

    saam_1974.7.4

    Discover More

    Amelia Earhart portrait

    1937: A Year in the Collections

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