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Ida Abelman - Via Northwestern

Via Northwestern (1939)

Ida Abelman (American, 1910–2002)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
This work was commissioned by the United States federal government as part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) program. It is not subject to copyright protection.
Ida Abelman

Ida York Abelman was an American artist and muralist in the 1930s. Abelman was known as a Social Realist. She was born Ida York and lived her early life in New York City. At the age of 19 she married Larry Abelman, also an artist.

She attended Hunter College, and studied at the Grand Central School of Art, the National Academy School of Fine Arts, and the City College of New York. She was a member of the American Artists' Congress and was hired by the Federal Art Project and the Works Progress Administration (WPA), both a part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal programs for artists.

Abelman was known for her graphic work that she produced during the Depression. She was heavily influenced by Constructivism, Surrealism, and Social realism. Her works often portrays a machine aesthetic by combining machine parts with human or organic forms to convey the positive and negative aspects of a mechanized society.

Abelman silhouetted her compositions against the full sheet of paper, imparting an abstracted strength to the lithographs that is a hallmark of her personal style.

Her work can be found in several published sources including American Prints of the 1930s (University of Michigan Museum of Art), The Machine Age in American Art, (Brooklyn Museum), 20th Century Prints (Queens College), and A Simple and Vital Design: The Story of the Indiana Post Office Murals (Indiana Historical Society).

Abelman was part of the staff of the Graphic Arts Division of the Federal Art Project in New York City from 1936 through 1939. Her artistic point of view and printmaking style made her work particularly suitable to the Project; images of industrial workers and elements of machinery were common parts of her iconography. Two of her prints for the Federal Art Project that illustrate this style are Man and Machine, c. 1939, and Construction, 1939.

In Collection: Works Progress Administration (WPA) Art (View all 421)

Mob

Mob (1935 - 1939)

Walter Leroy Flint (American, 1909-1990)
Ida Abelman

Ida Abelman (1938)

Elizabeth Olds (American, 1896 – 1991)
Southern Cottonpickers

Southern Cottonpickers (1935 - 1943)

John MacWhirter (Scottish , 1839 - 1911)
Employment of Negroes in Agriculture

Employment of Negroes in Agriculture (1934)

Earle Richardson (American, 1912-1935)
Wuxtry!

Wuxtry! (1939)

Albert Abramovitz (American, 1879–1963)
Lowlands

Lowlands (1936-1940)

Edmund Lewandowski (American, 1914–1998)
Evening

Evening (1938)

Theodore Polos (American, 1901-1976)
The Turtle

The Turtle (1935–43)

Mortimer Borne (American, 1902-1987)
Still Life

Still Life (ca. 1937)

Minetta Good (American, 1895–1946)
Bert Williams

Bert Williams (1935 - 1943)

Richard Brent (American, 20th century)
Crucifixon-Lynching

Crucifixon-Lynching (1949)

Irving Amen (American, 1918-2011)
Coal Yard

Coal Yard (1936)

Norman MacLeish (American, 1890-1975)
Home Relief Bureau

Home Relief Bureau (1940)

Howard Taft Lorenz (American, 1906-1956)
Trombone Player

Trombone Player (1935–40)

Fred Becker (American, 1913-2004)
S.F. House

S.F. House

Marguerite Redman Dorgeloh (American, 1890–1944)
View all 421 Artworks

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