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Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "1930s in New York City" ... Art Deco architecture of New York City; C.
The amount of office space in New York City increased by 92% in the late 1920s. [5]: 49–50 Zoning regulations had major impacts on the design of buildings. The proliferation of ever-larger skyscrapers like the 40-story Equitable Building spurred New York City's passage of the US's first citywide zoning code, the 1916 Zoning Resolution. [6]
Edward Trumbull – Transport and Human Endeavor (ceiling mural, lobby, Chrysler Building, New York City) [2] Suzanne Valadon – Nude Woman with a Blue Shawl; Christopher Wood. Anemones in a Cornish Window; Zebra and Parachute; Grant Wood. American Gothic; Stone City, Iowa; W. L. Wyllie – Panorama of the Battle of Trafalgar (Royal Naval ...
The Artists Union or Artists' Union was a short-lived union of artists in New York in the years of the Great Depression. It was influential in the establishment of both the Public Works of Art Project in December 1933 and the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration in August 1935. It functioned as the principal meeting-place ...
Soyer's teaching career began at the John Reed Club, New York, in 1930 and included stints at the Art Students League, the New School for Social Research and the National Academy. He was an artist of the Great Depression , and during the 1930s, Raphael and his brother Moses engaged in Social Realism, demonstrating empathy with the struggles of ...
Like the Works Progress Administration (WPA), the Section was part of a government project aimed at providing work for Americans throughout the Great Depression during the 1930s. The Section's main function was to select high-quality art to decorate public buildings in the form of murals, making art accessible to all people. Because post ...
Pablo Picasso, 1921, Three Musicians, oil on canvas, 200.7 × 222.9 cm, Museum of Modern Art, New York.Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest Pablo Picasso, 1921, Nous autres musiciens (Three Musicians), oil on canvas, 204.5 × 188.3 cm, Philadelphia Museum of Art Pablo Picasso, 1921, Head of a woman, pastel on paper, 65.1 x 50.2 cm, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York [1] Pablo Picasso ...
The Museum of French Art was an art museum in New York City, associated with the predecessor organizations to the current New York non-profit French Institute Alliance Française. It exhibited art in New York as part of a broader effort to popularize French art in the United States. The museum was active from 1911 to at least the 1930s.