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Painted during the Works Progress Administration (WPA) era of the 1930s, this scene reflects a broader American Regionalist interest in everyday life and community during the Great Depression. The Federal Art Project supported thousands of artists and encouraged depictions of local environments and ordinary people, sustaining artists while documenting American social landscapes. Born in Louisville and raised in Nashville, American artist Meyer R. Wolfe often depicted working-class and African American life in the city and the experiences he observed around him. In “The Conversation,” the simple act of two women talking beside a clothesline becomes quietly symbolic of domestic labor, neighborhood connection, and shared resilience he witnessed during the difficult Jim Crow era. 

Two Black women stand together in a yard beside a clothesline heavy with freshly washed garments. Their bodies lean slightly toward each other as if absorbed in quiet conversation. They are placed near the center of the composition, their dark silhouettes contrasted against the lighter cloth that hangs in soft shapes behind them. A wooden fence and modest buildings frame the space, while a church steeple rises in the background against a dim, evening sky. The setting suggests an ordinary residential neighborhood (likely Nashville, where the artist grew up). The women’s posture and proximity emphasize intimacy and trust rather than spectacle. We observe the moment almost as a passerby might, catching a private exchange at the end of the day.

This painting was included in the Frist Art Museum’s survey exhibition “The Art of Tennessee,” where it illustrated Jewish American Wolfe’s role in portraying regional life in the American South.

Painted during the Works Progress Administration (WPA) era of the 1930s, this scene reflects a broader American Regionalist interest in everyday life and community during the Great Depression. The Federal Art Project supported thousands of artists and encouraged depictions of local environments and ordinary people, sustaining artists while documenting American social landscapes. Born in Louisville and raised in Nashville, American artist Meyer R. Wolfe often depicted working-class and African American life in the city and the experiences he observed around him. In “The Conversation,” the simple act of two women talking beside a clothesline becomes quietly symbolic of domestic labor, neighborhood connection, and shared resilience he witnessed during the difficult Jim Crow era. Two Black women stand together in a yard beside a clothesline heavy with freshly washed garments. Their bodies lean slightly toward each other as if absorbed in quiet conversation. They are placed near the center of the composition, their dark silhouettes contrasted against the lighter cloth that hangs in soft shapes behind them. A wooden fence and modest buildings frame the space, while a church steeple rises in the background against a dim, evening sky. The setting suggests an ordinary residential neighborhood (likely Nashville, where the artist grew up). The women’s posture and proximity emphasize intimacy and trust rather than spectacle. We observe the moment almost as a passerby might, catching a private exchange at the end of the day. This painting was included in the Frist Art Museum’s survey exhibition “The Art of Tennessee,” where it illustrated Jewish American Wolfe’s role in portraying regional life in the American South.

“The Conversation” by Meyer R. Wolfe (American) - Oil on panel / c. 1930s - Frist Art Museum (Nashville, Tennessee) #WomenInArt #MeyerRWolfe #Wolfe #FristArtMuseum #AmericanArt #WPAArt #MeyerWolfe #artText #art #AmericanRegionalism #BlueskyArt #1930sArt #PortraitOfWomen #TheFrist #AmericanArtist

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the changing room doors and California Poppies on the western wall

the changing room doors and California Poppies on the western wall

the southeast corner mural transitioning to the stairs up to the restaurant

the southeast corner mural transitioning to the stairs up to the restaurant

the stairs up with carved sea monster railings, tile work, and fresco and the sun lighting it all

the stairs up with carved sea monster railings, tile work, and fresco and the sun lighting it all

a ticket booth? in the southwest corner

a ticket booth? in the southwest corner

In addition to the frescos, the interiors of the Chalet have amazing tile work and wood carving.
#BeachChalet #GGNRA #OceanBeach #SanFrancisco #WPA #WPAart #Frescoes #mosaic
#alphabetchallenge #weekIforInteriors 🧵/2
📷 © Rick Ehling 03/05/2026

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northwest corner, Fisherman’s Wharf and going to the beach

northwest corner, Fisherman’s Wharf and going to the beach

northwestern wall, the Embarcadero

northwestern wall, the Embarcadero

Eastern wall, a day at the beach I

Eastern wall, a day at the beach I

eastern wall to Baker Beach with the Marin headlands and the new Golden Gate in progress

eastern wall to Baker Beach with the Marin headlands and the new Golden Gate in progress

WPA murals - frescoes, in traditional wet plaster technique, by Lucien Labuadt, and assistants - 1936-7 inside the Beach Chalet.
#BeachChalet #GGNRA #OceanBeach #SanFrancisco #WPA #WPAart #Frescoes #mosaic
#alphabetchallenge #weekIforInteriors 🧵/1 📷 © Rick Ehling 03/05/2026

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A young woman with upright but relaxed posture as one hand settles near her shoulder and a small gold ring catches a pinpoint of light. American artist Alice Neel paints her medium-olive complexion with visible, confident strokes while a strong vertical shadow slices the face so one side is sunlit and the other falls into a cooler dusk, emphasizing bone structure and the bridge of her nose. She looks straight out with pale blue eyes under sharply arched dark brows, her gaze steady, assessing, and unflinching. Her auburn-brown hair is swept up in loose rolls, with a few darker tendrils gathered at the side. A flush of pink warms one cheek. Her lips are defined in a muted coral-red. She wears a voluminous white blouse gathered at the neckline into soft pleats. Thick whites and gray-blue shadows convey the fabric’s weight, turning the blouse into a bright field that frames the face and hand. Behind her, the space is simplified into broad horizontal bands of mustard yellow above, a deep black stripe at mid-height, and pale gray and brown planes to the side with faint linear marks suggesting boards. The flattened setting pushes her forward, making her presence feel immediate and unavoidable.

Painted in 1936 while Neel was employed by the Works Progress Administration, “Elenka” shows how she could fuse Depression-era directness with psychological intimacy. The Met noted during the “Alice Neel: People Come First” exhibition that a film historian speculated the sitter might be the future experimental filmmaker Maya Deren (then 19, in Greenwich Village, sometimes known as Eleanora or “Elinka”). The Museum also stresses that research into Elenka’s identity is ongoing. 

Neel resisted the label “portraitist,” preferring “pictures of people,” and treated New York as her human stage to paint people from many different backgrounds with a sharp eye for power and dignity.

A young woman with upright but relaxed posture as one hand settles near her shoulder and a small gold ring catches a pinpoint of light. American artist Alice Neel paints her medium-olive complexion with visible, confident strokes while a strong vertical shadow slices the face so one side is sunlit and the other falls into a cooler dusk, emphasizing bone structure and the bridge of her nose. She looks straight out with pale blue eyes under sharply arched dark brows, her gaze steady, assessing, and unflinching. Her auburn-brown hair is swept up in loose rolls, with a few darker tendrils gathered at the side. A flush of pink warms one cheek. Her lips are defined in a muted coral-red. She wears a voluminous white blouse gathered at the neckline into soft pleats. Thick whites and gray-blue shadows convey the fabric’s weight, turning the blouse into a bright field that frames the face and hand. Behind her, the space is simplified into broad horizontal bands of mustard yellow above, a deep black stripe at mid-height, and pale gray and brown planes to the side with faint linear marks suggesting boards. The flattened setting pushes her forward, making her presence feel immediate and unavoidable. Painted in 1936 while Neel was employed by the Works Progress Administration, “Elenka” shows how she could fuse Depression-era directness with psychological intimacy. The Met noted during the “Alice Neel: People Come First” exhibition that a film historian speculated the sitter might be the future experimental filmmaker Maya Deren (then 19, in Greenwich Village, sometimes known as Eleanora or “Elinka”). The Museum also stresses that research into Elenka’s identity is ongoing. Neel resisted the label “portraitist,” preferring “pictures of people,” and treated New York as her human stage to paint people from many different backgrounds with a sharp eye for power and dignity.

“Elenka” by Alice Neel (American) - Oil on canvas / 1936 - Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) #WomenInArt #AliceNeel #Neel #TheMet #ModernArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #art #artText #artwork #BlueskyArt #AmericanArt #AmericanArtist #WPAart #MetropolitanMuseumofArt #WomenPaintingWomen

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Vintage WPA-era poster depicting a man reading in a chair surrounded by playful Halloween imagery—a haunted house, ghosts, and a jack-o’-lantern moon—with the text “October’s Bright Blue Weather – A Good Time to Read!” Designed by Vera Bock for the Illinois Statewide Library Project (1930s). Public Domain, Library of Congress.

Vintage WPA-era poster depicting a man reading in a chair surrounded by playful Halloween imagery—a haunted house, ghosts, and a jack-o’-lantern moon—with the text “October’s Bright Blue Weather – A Good Time to Read!” Designed by Vera Bock for the Illinois Statewide Library Project (1930s). Public Domain, Library of Congress.

October’s bright blue weather—a good time to read. WPA poster by Vera Bock, 1930s.

thepalimpsest.nostalgicconfections.com?utm_source=b...

#thepalimpsest #wpaart #readingseason #publicdomain

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A tall, slender barefoot woman in a dirty teal sleeveless dress stands with her back to us at the edge of a rocky opening. Her right hand rests at her hip as she leans forward, peering into a cavern whose mouth frames pale water and low horizon under a mottled sky. Jagged brown cliffs flank the scene; at lower right lies a broken classical column with a curled volute, and stacked stone blocks appear at lower left. The palette is cool teal, earthen brown, and gray, with crisp, simplified forms and strong contours.

Spanish-born American artist Julio de Diego’s title points to “space” not as outer galaxies but as the charged void before the figure: a threshold between enclosure and expanse. The toppled column suggests a fallen order, while the woman’s poised stance with curiosity overriding fear signals modernity’s leap into the unknown. He builds the drama from oppositions: interior cave and exterior sea, ruin and possibility, gravity and imagination. The pared architecture and stylized anatomy reflect a modernist vocabulary inflected with the era’s taste for the surreal, turning landscape into psychology where we confront our own brink.

Made in 1936, this gouache entered the University of Oregon’s collection through U.S. government allocation from New Deal art projects, aligning it with the Federal Art Project’s goal to sustain artists and bring art to the public during the Depression.

Born in Madrid, Spain in 1900, de Diego immigrated to the United States in 1924 and settled in Chicago, where by the mid-1930s he was exhibiting at the Art Institute of Chicago. The period saw him refine a personal idiom mixing architecture, theater, and dreams as we see here in the way ruins, figure, and horizon interlock. In context of the moment of global uncertainty during the 1930s, "The Fascination of Space" captures an artist (and age) testing the edges of what comes next.

A tall, slender barefoot woman in a dirty teal sleeveless dress stands with her back to us at the edge of a rocky opening. Her right hand rests at her hip as she leans forward, peering into a cavern whose mouth frames pale water and low horizon under a mottled sky. Jagged brown cliffs flank the scene; at lower right lies a broken classical column with a curled volute, and stacked stone blocks appear at lower left. The palette is cool teal, earthen brown, and gray, with crisp, simplified forms and strong contours. Spanish-born American artist Julio de Diego’s title points to “space” not as outer galaxies but as the charged void before the figure: a threshold between enclosure and expanse. The toppled column suggests a fallen order, while the woman’s poised stance with curiosity overriding fear signals modernity’s leap into the unknown. He builds the drama from oppositions: interior cave and exterior sea, ruin and possibility, gravity and imagination. The pared architecture and stylized anatomy reflect a modernist vocabulary inflected with the era’s taste for the surreal, turning landscape into psychology where we confront our own brink. Made in 1936, this gouache entered the University of Oregon’s collection through U.S. government allocation from New Deal art projects, aligning it with the Federal Art Project’s goal to sustain artists and bring art to the public during the Depression. Born in Madrid, Spain in 1900, de Diego immigrated to the United States in 1924 and settled in Chicago, where by the mid-1930s he was exhibiting at the Art Institute of Chicago. The period saw him refine a personal idiom mixing architecture, theater, and dreams as we see here in the way ruins, figure, and horizon interlock. In context of the moment of global uncertainty during the 1930s, "The Fascination of Space" captures an artist (and age) testing the edges of what comes next.

"The Fascination of Space" by Julio de Diego (Spanish-American) - Gouache on paper / 1936 - Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (Eugene, Oregon) #WomenInArt #art #JulioDeDiego #Diego #artwork #artText #WPAart #ModernArt #surrealism #surrealist #UofO #JSMA #UniversityofOregon #JordanSchnitzerMuseumofArt

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☀️ Happy Summer Solstice! ☀️

Celebrate the longest day of the year with these seasonal Works Progress Administration artworks. Featuring lithograph prints by Minetta Good & Ann Nooney.

#QPLarchives #SummerSolstice #QueensLibrary #WPAArt #1930s #NewDeal #WPALithograph

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Corgis In The Art Gallery! The original: Mervin Jules, "Watch Repair," lithograph, circa 1930. Madison Museum of Contemporary Art.
#CorgisInTheArtGallery #CorgiArtParody #CorgiArt #WPAart #Corgi

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Color print of a stylish African American woman with blue hair, a small hat, and blue accents on her clothing. Her partial shadow on the striped wallpaper is also blue.

Color print of a stylish African American woman with blue hair, a small hat, and blue accents on her clothing. Her partial shadow on the striped wallpaper is also blue.

"Girl with Blue Hair" by Blanche Grambs. Lithograph signed by author, ca. 1935–43.

Works Progress Administration (WPA) Art Collection, NYPL Digital Collections, digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/8ebea460-d56d-0131...

#WHM #WomensHistory #Art #WPAart

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