Abstract
In this first biography of artist Belle (Goldschlager) Baranceanu, Jennifer Peoples Hernandez tells the extraordinary story of a woman who rose from humble beginnings to become the most important female muralist in San Diego during the Great Depression and a prominent California Modern artist. Her meteoric rise in the art world began in Chicago in the 1920s, but the onset of the Great Depression nearly ended her career. Drawing from previously unpublished letters and archival records, Hernandez skillfully weaves Baranceanu’s resilient story into the larger history of the Depression and New Deal in Chicago and San Diego and highlights the success of the government’s work relief programs. For Baranceanu and others fortunate enough to work for the New Deal art projects, the Depression turned out to be a golden
age in American art history with a level of government patronage that has been unmatched ever since.
Schlagworte
art california community art curriculum FDR American history illustrators jewish artists jewish history women's history muralists museum great depression new deal- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- i–xii Preface i–xii
- 137–16 Chapter 6: Relief 137–16
- 299–330 Bibliography 299–330
- 331–346 Index 331–346
- 347–348 About the Author 347–348