Home » Federal Arts Project 1935 -- Artists Roster
Federal Arts Project 1935 -- Artists Roster
The Federal Art Project (FAP) was the visual-arts arm of the Great Depression-era New Deal Work Projects Administration Federal One program in the United States. It operated from August 29, 1935, until June 30, 1943. Reputed to have created more than 200,000 separate works, FAP artists created posters, murals and paintings. Some works still stand among the most-significant pieces of public art in the country.
The program made no distinction between representational and nonrepresentational art. Abstraction had not yet gained favor in the 1930s and 1940s and, thus, was virtually unsalable. As a result, the program supported such iconic artists as Jackson Pollock before their work could earn them income.
The FAP's primary goals were to employ out-of-work artists and to provide art for non-federal government buildings: schools, hospitals, libraries, etc. The work was divided into art production, art instruction and art research. The primary output of the art-research group was the Index of American Design, a mammoth and comprehensive study of American material culture.
The FAP was one of a short-lived series of Depression-era visual-arts programs, which included the Section of Painting and Sculpture and the Public Works of Art Project (both of which, unlike the WPA-operated FAP, were operated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury)
Some of the well-known artists supported by the project:
Berenice Abbott
William Baziotes
Thomas Hart Benton
Leon Bibel
Dorr Bothwell
Eleanor Coen
Francis Criss
Stuart Davis
Werner Drewes
Philip Evergood
Arshile Gorky
Adolph Gottlieb
Harry Gottlieb
William Gropper
Philip Guston
Marsden Hartley
Donal Hord
Albert Kotin
Lee Krasner
Jacob Lawrence
Tom Lea
Conrad Marca-Relli
John Marin
Jan Matulka
Louise Berliawsky Nevelson
Jackson Pollock
Daniel Rhodes
Mark Rothko
Louis Schanker
Georgette Seabrooke
Ben Shahn
Harry Shoulberg
William Sommer
Alton Tobey
Mark Tobey
Willem de Kooning and Santiago Martínez Delgado were also employed by the FAP temporarily but were unable to stay because they were not U.S. citizens at the time.