Women printmakers are focus of latest Hite Art Institute exhibit at UofL
Nineteen female artists from the Great Depression era are the center of the Hite Art Institute’s summer exhibit at UofL. May 19, 2015“The Beauty of a Block: Women Printmakers of the WPA Era” showcases the work of women employed through the Works Progress Administration’s (WPA) Federal Art Project in the 1930s and 1940s.
The prints were selected from the Hite Art Institute’s print and drawing collection and curated by UofL critical and curatorial studies students Megan Bogard-Gettelfinger, Whitney Mashburn, Jessica Oberdick, Elizabeth Smith and Leanna Smith.
The selected pieces encompass a wide variety of mediums and subject matter, with imagery focused on workers, families, landscapes and the industrial growth of America during the time period including race, gender and societal roles. The print mediums include woodcuts, lithography and serigraphy.
Artists included are: Gertrude Abercrombie, Florence Arquin, Ida Abelman, Leah Balsham, Vera Berdich, Kathleen Blackshear, Bernarda Bryson Shahn, Cleo Van Buskirk, Ruth Cheney, Eleanor Coen, Blanche Grambs, Nan Lurie, Clara Mahl, Ann Nooney, Miné Okubo, Elizabeth Olds, Dorothy Rutka, Ethel Spears and Katherine Uhl.
The Federal Art Project was the visual arts section of the WPA. Part of the New Deal programs, it provided artists with full-time employment to make art for non-federal buildings including schools, hospitals and libraries. This display illuminates the substantial contributions women artists of the era made to the field.
Along with the art pieces, the exhibit includes a reading room with a variety of books used to research the artists, as well as supplemental materials and WPA-commissioned posters.
“The Beauty of a Block” will run from May 29 through July 17 at the Schneider Hall Galleries at UofL. An opening reception will be held from 5-7 p.m., Friday, May 29, at the galleries. The exhibit and reception are free and open to the public.
Erica Walsh is the marketing director for the Office of Communications and Marketing. Her job lets her share UofL’s good news in all avenues of communications including publications, advertising, content marketing and branding. Walsh joined UofL in 2014 after previously serving as the public relations specialist at Indiana University Southeast. Prior to her career in higher education communications she was an award-winning newspaper reporter. Red is one of her favorite colors and it’s a good thing, too, because she earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism from Western Kentucky University and her master’s in communication from UofL.