Watercolor paintings from the Great Depression- Is it Art?

QUEENS CENTRAL LIBRARY- The exhibit titled “Preserving Our Cultural Heritage: Newly Conserved Work from the Queens Library’s Holdings in the Index of American Design” featured watercolor depictions of dresses and house ware from the American colonial period to the 19th c. The watercolor paintings featured in the exhibit were part of the Federal Art Project (FAP) of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) of the Great Depression. The project employed 1000 artists over a span of 6 years who created over 18,000 watercolor paintings. The project was started to create much needed jobs and also to serve the growing public need for information on American design at the time. The exhibit displayed watercolor paintings of rather mundane and ordinary objects of pre-19th century life- quilt spreads, napkins, dresses, and chairs. Expecting an artistic experience, coming to this exhibit was a waste of time. If the government was really concerned about preserving the ways of American pre-19th c. life, they should have preserved the actual quilt spreads, napkins, dresses, and chairs of the time, not produce watercolor paintings of them. I don’t have a problem with the government trying to boost the economy with jobs through the FAP but I don’t think ordinary watercolor paintings like these can be considered art. These paintings cannot be appreciated for their aesthetics (almost anyone could have painted these). Rather, these paintings can only be appreciated for their historical significance.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.