The Works Progress Administration was a work-relief program established under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal that employed thousands of visual artists from 1935 to 1943. Drawn from The Rockwell Museum’s collection and augmented by significant loans, Art at Work features works by both notable and lesser-known artists, including Thomas Hart Benton, Douglass Crockwell, Philip Evergood, Michael Gallagher, Riva Helfond, Gene Kloss, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Reginald Marsh, Elizabeth Olds, and Dox Thrash.
Divided into three sections devoted to the dignity of labor, regional landscapes and community life, and government patronage, the works on view vividly demonstrate how art functioned as both a civic resource and a reflection of American resilience. The Museum will present, through its Smithsonian Affiliate status, a major loan from the Smithsonian American Art Museum: a mural study by William Gropper for the Department of the Interior building in Washington, D.C., representing one of the many large-scale infrastructure projects undertaken by the federal government during this period.
Organized in recognition of the nation’s 250th anniversary and in support of the Museum’s 50th anniversary theme, Rockwell Reframed, the exhibition reframes WPA art as a far-reaching cultural undertaking that continues to resonate with audiences today. Art at Work celebrates not only the art workers of the WPA but also embodies the enduring values of The Rockwell Museum, as an institution deeply committed to uplifting the communities it has served for the past fifty years.