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News about the Fine Arts Collection


GSA is responsible for thousands of federally commissioned artworks. Learn more about the Art in Architecture/Fine Arts Division >

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New Deal Art
Learn about one of the most extensive public art programs in the history of the United States


Conservation
Preserving America's artwork for the future
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About the Collection
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We welcome your feedback, questions and interest in our Collection. Email us at: fineartscollection@gsa.gov
The Fine Arts Collection is one of the nation's oldest and largest public art collections. It consists of mural and easel paintings, sculptures, architectural and environmental artworks, as well as prints and other works on paper dating from the 1850s to the present. These civic artworks are displayed in federal buildings and courthouses nationwide. In addition, more than 23,000 easel paintings, prints, and small-scale sculptures created during the New Deal are on long-term loan to museums and other non-profit institutions across the United States. Maintained by GSA as a part of America's national and cultural heritage, the Fine Arts Collection also serves as a reminder of the important tradition of individual creative expression.
From its inception to the present, the Fine Arts Collection has two distinct characteristics: the artworks are commissioned to adorn and enhance civic architecture and they are paid for with taxpayers' funds. Therefore, these artworks belong to the American people, and are held in public trust for current and future generations.
The Fine Arts Collection traces its origins to the mid-nineteenth century, during a time (from 1852 until 1939) when the Department of the Treasury's Office of the Supervising Architect administered the construction of federal buildings. The earliest works in the collection date to the 1850s, when Auguste de Frasse was commissioned to create bas reliefs for the Marble Hall of the new U.S. Custom House in New Orleans, Louisiana. Following the devastation of the American Civil War, the country embarked on a period of tremendous ggrid-rowth and increased wealth in the 1880s. The artists and architects who designed the next generation of public buildings had been inspired by the Beaux-Arts monuments they had seen while studying abroad. The numerous custom houses, courthouses, post offices, and federal buildings constructed at the turn of the twentieth century include paintings, sculptures, and architectural ornamentation that reflect those artists' renewed interest in classicism and their use of symbolic and allegorical figures to represent the activities of the government.
During the New Deal era of the 1930s, the ggrid-rowth of the federal government led once again to an extensive building campaign. To adorn these buildings, provide employment, and make art available to communities large and small, the government administered four separate public art programs: the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), the Federal Art Project (FAP), the Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP), and the Section of Fine Arts. From 1934 to 1943, these programs proved unprecedented in both their size and scope. By their close, the projects had generated hundreds of thousands of civic artworks.
GSA assumed responsibility for the design and construction of federal buildings when it was established in 1949. Through the 1950s, the commissioning of artwork for new federal buildings was overseen by GSA's Public Buildings Service (PBS), in cooperation with the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts in Washington, D.C. The PBS consulted with the Commission on the recommendation of painters and sculptors for the "decoration" of federal buildings.
GSA's Art in Architecture Program, which continues today, was first established in 1963, based on the recommendation of President John F. Kennedy's Ad Hoc Committee on Federal Office Space. The committee's report contained the Guiding Principles for Federal Architecture, which state that "where appropriate, fine art should be incorporated into the designs of federal buildings with emphasis on the work of living American artists."
To accomplish this, GSA reserves at least one-half of one percent of the estimated construction cost of each new federal building or major renovation project to commission art. These newly commissioned artworks, created by both established and emerging American artists, are diverse in style and media. They include paintings and sculptures, as well as landscape- and electronic-based artworks, textiles, ceramics, stained glass, and photography.
Together, these thousands of historical and contemporary artworks that are displayed and maintained as part of the Fine Arts Collection chronicle the rich and complex history of the United States, enhance the experiences of citizens interacting with their government, and constitute an enduring and irreplaceable cultural legacy for the nation.
Photo Credits:
Homage to Medicare and Medicaid - copyright Carol M. Highsmith Photography;
Beside the Lake - copyright University of Michigan Museum of Art;
Girl with Blue Hair - copyright University of Michigan Museum of Art;
Non-Sign II - copyright Lead Pencil Studio.
New Deal Art
New Deal art was produced under four separate federal programs that operated from 1933 to 1943. The artists who worked for these programs created thousands of paintings, sculptures, and works on paper.
The four programs were:
- Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), 1933-1934. The PWAP was a work-relief program. Artists were on government payrolls and received weekly salaries.
- The Section of Fine Arts (The Section), 1934-1943. Originally called the Section of Painting and Sculpture, the Section of Fine Arts awarded commissions to artists through competitions. This program's primary objective was to obtain the highest quality artwork for installation into public buildings.
- Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP), 1935-1938. TRAP employed artists to create paintings and sculptures for existing federal buildings.
- Works Progress Administration, Federal Art Project (WPA/FAP), 1935-1943. The Federal Art Project, later named the Work Projects Administration Art Program, was the largest of the New Deal art programs in both its scope and the number of artists employed.
The artists working for these New Deal programs employed a range of visual styles, although most of the artworks they produced would fit into the American Scene or Social Realist schools. The WPA/FAP also cultivated stylistically experimental works that greatly influenced the subsequent development of art in America. The subjects selected for New Deal artworks were often place-based, frequently depicted historical events, or else represented some aspect of modern life. For example, an artwork might picture Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen forging cannon balls, while another would celebrate the recent construction of an electric power plant in rural Montana. Despite many of the artists' interest in contemporary society, they tended to avoid pointed depictions of the hardships and grittiness of the Depression.
In 1934, the federal government began loaning or allocating the available artworks created under the New Deal art programs to public agencies and nonprofit institutions throughout the nation. Stewardship of these artworks became the responsibility of the General Services Administration when it was established in 1949. Today, GSA remains the federal agency responsible for inventorying these loaned artworks. This is an ongoing project, which now encompasses more than 23,000 artworks.
Works In This Gallery9
PAINTINGS - MURALS
-
The Two Rivers
FA328
Painting, Mural
1943
-
Pittsburgh Panorama
FA474
Painting, Mural
1937
-
An Incident in Contemporary American Life
FA526
Painting, Mural
1943
-
General Store and Post Office
FA574-A
Painting, Mural
1938
PAINTINGS
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Four Phases of Labor
FA22340
Painting
1935- 1942
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The Circus
FA23198
Painting
1935

The Accident
FA23791
Painting
1936

Harbor Scene at Night
FA24899
Painting
1937
PRINTS
-
Girl Sewing
FA14031
Print
1935- 1942
-
Roof Scene
FA14031
1935-1942
Print
-
Sonora Way
FA14127
Print
1939
-
Worker with Mallet
FA14086
Print
1938
SCULPTURE
-
Man Controlling Trade
FA554-A
Sculpture
1942
-
Young American Man
FA894-A
Sculpture
1939
-
Justice
FA1717-C
Sculpture
1941
-
Scrub Woman
FA2856
Sculpture
1935- 1942
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