Exhibitions 2005
<< back
Coming
Home: American Paintings 1930-1950, from the Schoen Collection,
May 4 - July 24, 2005
From
May 4 through July 24, 2005, the Telfair is proud to present Coming
Home: American Paintings, 1930-1950, from the Schoen Collection,
an extensive private collection of American art produced during
the tumultuous decades spanning the Great Depression and World War
II. Featuring 127 largely representational works from the 1930s
and 1940s, the show explores a variety of themes including regional
life; urban and industrial landscapes; signage, billboards and the
American road; work and labor; the Depression on the farm and in
the city; social protest; and fantasy and post-surrealism.
The
paintings presented in Coming Home exhibit a broad array
of stylistic tendencies including social realism, regionalism, surrealism,
magic realism, precisionism, and American scene painting. The show
includes works by celebrated artists Thomas Hart Benton, John Steuart
Curry, Philip Evergood, Ben Shahn, and Paul Cadmus. Also featured
are Lamar Dodd, Robert Gwathmey, Andree Ruellan, and Peppino Mangravite,
who are represented in the Telfair’s permanent collection.
This engaging exhibition includes important Georgia artists like
Dodd and a number of others who worked in Savannah, such as Alexander
Brook.
Many
of the artists included in Coming Home worked under the
auspices of various New Deal programs, producing murals and other
art for public consumption. As scholar Erika Doss notes in the handsome
catalogue that accompanies the exhibition, “For over a decade,
from about 1933 to 1943, the federal government was the primary
patron of American art and artists.” Co-organized by the Georgia
Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, and the Mobile Museum
of Art, Coming Home is the first major show devoted to
Depression and war-era American painting to be held at the Telfair.
This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the
Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly.
The Council is a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the
Arts. Mobile Museum of Art programs are made possible, in part,
by a grant from the Alabama State Council on the Arts.
|