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Hard Times, 1929-1939

Archives of American Art

A great economic depression was sweeping the United States and the American workers, and the artists too, had their own troubles to worry about. Wages were being slashed, strikes were taking place everywhere. Strong men were selling apples on street corners. The young artist who depended on his hands to eat was catapulted violently from the heights of his ivory tower into the whirlpool of suffering humanity. There was absolutely no private patronage.

—Philip Evergood, 1945


The crash of the stock market in 1929 initiated a chain of events that crippled the American art scene. As money from private patrons and museums evaporated, artists joined the nation’s staggering number of unemployed workers. Beginning in 1933, government–sponsored art programs provided work relief for artists, employing them as muralists, painters, sculptors, art educators, and researchers. It was a decade of social change that accelerated the rise of unions and spirited art organizations.

The toils and triumphs of a wide range of individual artists and art organizations—documented in letters, photographs, journals, business records, and oral history interviews at the Archives of American Art—reveal how American artists survived against the odds.

Hear the voices of HARD TIMES:

  • Burgoyne Diller (1906-1965), painter and administrator [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • Dorothea Lange (1895-1965), photographer [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • Marion Greenwood (1909-1970), mural painter [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • William Zorach (1887-1966), sculptor [Audio clip | About the interview]
  • Lee Krasner (1908-1984), painter [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • Dora Kaminsky (1909-1977), printmaker [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • Edward Chavez (1917-1995), sculptor [Audio clip | Interview transcript]
  • Ibram Lassaw (1913-2003), sculptor [Audio clip | About the interview]
  • Lucienne Bloch (1909-1999), painter [Audio clip | About the interview]
  • Eugenie Gershoy (1901-1983), sculptor [Audio clip | Interview transcript]

Adelaide Annette Parrott to Edward Bruce

Protest held by the John Reed Club and Artists' Union

Frank and Ieda Hanley Christmas card to Louis Lozowick

New Masses memorandum to unidentified recipients

Edward Bruce, Washington, D.C. letter to Leon Kroll

Lewis Rubenstein's sketchbook documenting a hunger march to Washington, D.C.

James Penney's New York Sketchbook

List of business depressions

Regional Directors and Washington Administrative Staff . Public Works Art Project

William E.L. Bunn painting a mural for a post office in Minden, Neb.

George Biddle

Augusta Savage with her sculpture Realization

City Arabesque

Art front

Marion Greenwood

Eugenie Gershoy

William Zorach with sculpture

Lee Krasner

Lucienne Bloch painting The cycle of a woman's life

James Penney draft letter to "Johnson"

Bernard Zakheim and Julia Rogers work on Coit Tower mural

George Harris and Fred Olmstead working on Coit Tower mural

Edward Beatty Rowan, Washington, D.C. letter to Chaim Gross, New York, N.Y.

Chaim Gross working on his sculpture Alaska snow-shoe mail carrier

A life class for adults at the Brooklyn Museum, under the auspice of the New York City WPA Art Project

Edward Chavez with Bronze Cross for Episcapal Chape, in Woodstock, New York, 1950. Photograph by Robert Sewall.

Index of American Design at Macy's Department Store, NYC

Holger Cahill with Ed Rowan

Rocking chair

Max Weber, Long Island, N.Y. letter to Rockwell Kent, Ausable Forks, N.Y.

Stuart Davis, New York, N.Y. letter to Rockwell Kent

Artists' Union Rally

Sketches from Karl Marx's Capital in Lithographs

Olin Dows letter to William Gropper and draft response from Gropper

George Biddle letter to Holger Cahill


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