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Go directly to the collection, By the People, For the People: Posters from the WPA, 1936-1943, in American Memory, or view a Summary of Resources related to the collection.
By the People, For the People: Posters from the WPA, 1936-1943,
offers a unique opportunity to examine the social history of the United
States through poster art. Works in this collection represent many programs
from President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration
(WPA) that address the arts, education, low-income housing, and public
health. Additional works in this collection reflect conditions in the
United States during World War II.
1. Federal Project Number One
The growing popularity of radio and motion pictures reduced the number
of job opportunities available to professional musicians and theater
workers during the 1920s. A decade later, the Great Depression eliminated
many of the remaining jobs.
In 1935, the WPA established the Federal Project Number One, a collection
of government-funded programs for professionals in the fields of drama,
music, writing, and art. This project employed thousands of people to
provide educational and recreational opportunities in communities across
the United States.
The visual-arts branch of the program, the Federal Art Project (FAP),
designed posters for many Federal Project Number One efforts. Searches on the terms,
theatre project, music project, and writers' project
yield hundreds of posters from this collection. The Special Presentation,
"Amassing American 'Stuff':
The Library of Congress and the Federal Art Projects of the 1930s"
from the American Memory collection, The New Deal Stage:
Selections from the Federal Theatre Project: 1935-1939, provides
additional information about the WPA holdings available from the Library
of Congress.
b. Federal Music Project
Project Director Nikolai Sokoloff led a campaign to provide
free concerts, music education, and newly-commissioned music to
the public. One of the major projects, the Index of American Composers,
comprised a list of composers from across the nation. The list
included biographical information and cataloged thousands of works
to be performed by the WPA musicians. Performances within the
Federal Music Project included symphony
concerts, Verdi's opera, "Il
Trovatore," and "Songs
and Piano Music Everybody Should Know." An example of the
Federal Music Project's research efforts is available in the American
Memory collection, The WPA
California Folk Music Project.
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c. Federal Writers' Project
This program employed thousands of writers and served as a training ground for
authors such as Saul Bellow, John Cheever, Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston, and
Richard Wright. Early projects included guides such as "Who's
Who in the Zoo" and "Skiing
in the East" and history books such as "Cavalcade
of the American Negro: The Story of the Negro's Progress During 75 Years." Other
efforts of the Federal Writers' Project are documented in American Memory
collections such as American Life Histories:
Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1940 and Born in Slavery: Slave
Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1938.
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- Why do you think that the Federal Project Number One sponsored educational
and recreational programs?
- Do you think that there were other benefits to the project besides
providing employment opportunities?
- How did graphic artists represent the different branches of the
Federal Project Number One and their variety of programs?
- What types of images were used to advertise a program?
- Do you think that these posters were successful advertisements?
Why or why not?
- Do you think that there were other benefits to the posters besides
providing employment and advertising?
- Why do you think that there were specific projects created by and
for African Americans?
2. Federal Art Project
This branch of the Federal Project Number One supported many artistic opportunities
outside of advertising other WPA programs. Many visual artists were commissioned to
create murals, sculptures, paintings, and posters. The Special Presentation, "Posters for the People," from
the American Memory collection, The New Deal Stage: Selections
from the Federal Theatre Project: 1935-1939, explains that the FAP provided
visual artists in the United States with a unique opportunity:
Not only did it allow artists to practice their craft,
collaborate and innovate, but it served as a collective apprenticeship
for artists who brought America to the forefront of international art
. . . . [such as] Jackson Pollock, Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning,
Mark Rothko and Louise Nevelson - artists who not only put U.S. art
on the map but shifted the center of that map from Paris to New York.
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centers opened across the nation offering classroom and exhibition
space as FAP employees taught art education and art appreciation
courses. A search on art
class produces sample posters that advertise free classes for
adults
and children
in disciplines such as painting, sculpture, drawing, and pottery.
Meanwhile, a search on
exhibition produces advertisements for events sponsoring
and promoting artists ranging from local artists, including local
children, members
of the FAP, as well as internationally-acclaimed artists such
as Pablo
Picasso.
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A WPA Education Program in Chicago. |
FAP workers also researched the nation's art history. A search on the phrase, Index
of American Design, produces posters for exhibits of American folk art. Similar to
the Federal Music Project's Index of American Composers, this project provided
a photographic record of the country's artistic accomplishments by documenting thousands
of paintings, sculptures, handicrafts, and folk art between 1935 and 1942.
- Why do you think that the FAP exhibited such a wide range of art,
including professional and folk art as well as work by local children?
- Why do you think that education was an important aspect of the arts programs in
Federal Project Number One?
- What do you think is the relationship between art education and art patronage?
- What do you think were the benefits of creating an Index of American Design?
3. Education
The Federal Project Number One wasn't the only government-sponsored
program offering community-education courses during the 1930s.
The WPA's Adult Education Project provided classes on a variety
of subjects in conjunction with local Boards of Education. A search on the phrase,
free classes, yields posters that advertise adult education
classes such as reading,
writing, arithmetic, trade
and technical skills, and rudimentary
English. Occupational classes were also available for teenage
boys
and girls
but the advertised "pay, employment, security, and promotion"
often was different for males and females.
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Boys--Are You Interested in a Job?
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Girls--Are You Interested in a Job?
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- What types of adult skills training were available through
the WPA?
- Why do you think that adult education was important to combat
the Great Depression?
- What is the difference between job opportunities advertised
for boys and girls? Why do you think that these distinctions
were made? Do you think that these distinctions were fair?
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4. Urban Housing
The National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 established the Public
Works Administration (PWA) and allocated $3.3 billion to construction
projects across the United States. Four years later, the National Housing
Act required that whenever new low-income housing was constructed, nearby
substandard housing was to be demolished. This legislation was intended
to improve the quality of available low-income housing without influencing
the real estate market.
- What types of images and colors are used to depict the slums?
- How do these images representing existing housing projects compared
to the images of new low-income housing?
- How did posters promoting the notion of planned housing attempt
to influence the public? What motivations did the posters provide
the public for supporting planned housing?
- How do these posters compare to posters that advertised specific developments such as the program from the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority?
- Do you think that new housing could combat some of the social ills
of the city, as advertising suggested?
- What other types of programs do you think might have improved the
living conditions in these parts of a city?
- How do these efforts compare to the building of high-rise housing
projects during the second half of the twentieth century?
5. World War II
| The nation mobilized
for war in the wake of Japan's December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor.
The newly-established War Production Board converted industries
from a commercial to a war effort and conserved scarce materials
such as steel. Searches on the
terms salvage and water produce posters portraying
conservation as an integral part of the national defense.
In addition to limiting consumption, citizens were asked to contribute money and goods.
War loans and the sale of Liberty Bonds covered half of the cost of the war. A search on bonds yields
posters encouraging the purchase of stamps and bonds with slogans such as "He
gives 100%, you can lend 10%."
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Don't Be A Drip! Be patriotic... Stop Leaks... Save
Water... |
- What types of images and phrases did these posters employ to emphasize
community involvement?
- Do you think that these efforts were effective ways to call for
public conservation and donations? Why or why not?
- How do you think that the public responded to these requests?
- Do you think that the public was required to make personal sacrifices?
If so, how?
- Why do you think that some posters emphasized the limited discussion
of military topics? Do you think that this is censorship? Why or why
not?
- What types of public service information did posters provide regarding
the war?
6. Public Health
| The WPA also had
federal health agencies that provided services to address disease
epidemics and to raise public awareness. A search on health
produces posters that emphasize a number of proactive approaches
to health care.
Some pieces emphasize preventive efforts such as tests and examinations for manageable diseases such as gonorrhea,
smallpox,
syphilis,
and tuberculosis.
For example, one poster promoting treatment
for syphilis declares, "Shame may be fatal: If you fear you have contracted a
disease don't let false shame destroy health & happiness."
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Chicago Will Control Syphilis. |
- How did these posters attempt to deal with both curable and incurable
conditions? What actions were recommended in each case? Why do you
think that the federal government was interested in promoting such
actions?
- How do sanitation and nutrition relate to these actions?
- Who do you think benefits from these actions and their promotion?
Why?
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