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Lumber Industry

American Art Museum

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    Object Details

    Artist

    William Arthur Cooper, born Hillsboro, NC 1895-died St. Louis, MO 1974

    Exhibition Label

    This painting of a Tennessee sawmill processing raw tree trunks looks like a straightforward image of a thriving southern industry. But the beginning of the Great Depression had curtailed American building. Starting in 1929, mills like this one had been closed. For three years, "there was no hard-wood industry." By January 1933, the American forest industries that supplied boards for construction were in a crisis, termed "one of the pressing national problems of the day." Finally, as Federal construction projects began around the country in the spring and summer of 1933, the hardwood industry and other suppliers began to recover.
    Logging crews returned to southern forests and logs poured into reopened saw mills like the one portrayed by William A. Cooper. Cooper, an African American minister who used art to explore the character and situation of his race, specialized in portraits. While this painting stresses not people but machinery such as the cranes and chute that take lumber into the sawmill, it might easily escape our notice that many of the workers in mills like this one were black. The white plumes from steam-driven band saws and the piles of logs ready for sawing were welcome sights for Cooper's southern African American community and their white colleagues.1934: A New Deal for Artists exhibition label

    Credit Line

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the U.S. Department of Labor

    Date

    1934

    Object number

    1964.1.154

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    Painting

    Medium

    oil on canvas

    Dimensions

    24 1/8 x 29 7/8 in. (61.3 x 75.9 cm)

    See more items in

    Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection

    Department

    Painting and Sculpture

    Data Source

    Smithsonian American Art Museum

    Topic

    Architecture\industry\mill
    Occupation\industry\lumber
    New Deal\Public Works of Art Project\Tennessee

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk7d32753f3-3c00-4075-828e-577611c40f4d

    Record ID

    saam_1964.1.154

    Discover More

    Greetings from Tennessee 37 cent stamp.

    Explore America: Tennessee

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