Art Survives Adversity
In 1935 during the Great Depression the Works Progress administration was created to relieve the economic burden of American citizens who were suffering, Among others, this program employed over 5000 artists during the years it was in place and created nearly a quarter of a million pieces of artwork. Although a great deal of that artwork is lost to us now, Its legacy lives on and a testament to the American governments at the time who had the foresight to keep the art alive.
The Following is a mural called "A Raising in Early New Jersey" Painted in the Washington New Jersey Post office. This Painting was completed in 1940. By a local artist named Frank D. Shapiro an internet source tells me it is Oil on Canvas
The Post office itself was built in 1939
Beyond that physical limitation I feel that the piece speaks very well for the time. The image depicts Colonial Americans Raising a Barn or a house. A building of something new for the young family set to inhabit it. Shapiro would paint something peaceful during a time when the world was on the brink of war, Just the past Year Germany invaded Poland and World War II was to begin. Though the conflict was far from the United States at the time It was only 11 years earlier that the First World war ended and soon enough, maybe Frank speculated, we would be at war again, so let me paint something of substance that will perhaps make swords back into plowshares in the minds of those who gaze upon this piece in years to come, let them remember not the war that was ravaging Europe but have them think upon a time when there was no war. And the only trouble to be had was a rainy day slowing down the work. And let my piece also be a testament to the Government program that is putting food on my table right now, let me show Americans hard at work building America as we are now rebuilding her.
Research By: David Brandes
Photographs by David Brandes
Photograph 1 Courtesy of anonymous his “Flikr” name is jimmywayne22
For other similiar art works-murals in New Jersey Go To to:http://www.wpamurals.com/newjersy.htm
Monday, December 8, 2008
Monday, December 1, 2008
Mural, Stockton, N.J. By: William "Billy" Selesnick
Stockton, New Jersey is quaint town located along the Delaware River, just across from Upper Bucks County, PA. The Mural is located at 13 Bridge Street and North Railroad Avenue on the Via Ponte Trattoria, Italian Restaurant. Just another reason to visit the area.
Artist: William "Billy" Selesnick.
For his biography and to view many of his famous works of art go to:
ADDITIONAL MURALS go To:
http://selesnick.com/mu_000.htm
http://selesnick.com/index.html
http://selesnick.com/bio.htm
Photograph By: John J. Kuczynski
Artist: William "Billy" Selesnick.
For his biography and to view many of his famous works of art go to:
ADDITIONAL MURALS go To:
http://selesnick.com/mu_000.htm
http://selesnick.com/index.html
http://selesnick.com/bio.htm
Photograph By: John J. Kuczynski
Secret Garden, By Adrienne Crombie, Frenchtown NJ
These paintings are located on Harrison Street on the corner of Bridge Street, Frenchtown, Hunterdon, New Jersey. They are painted on the exterior of #29 Bridge Street. The artist utilized what appeared to be a former window and doorway to Harrison Street. The artist was able to incorporate the mural/paintings into the brick exterior providing depth, and dimension to the composition.
Artist: Adrienne Crombie
Town: Frenchtown, NJ
Year: 1998
Materials: acrylic on primed cement
To view Additional
Murals :http://www.muralsandmoldings.com/wall-murals.htm
Link to artist website:
http://www.muralsandmoldings.com/
Artists's Comments:
Inspiration:
I had recovered from Guillaime Barre Syndrome and moved back to my hometown at age forty. I had a vision of a healing garden and started collecting photos and imagery that corresponded with my vision. I met the owner of the building at 31 Bridge Street, David Miller, and told him what I wanted to do. We took got approval from the Planning Board to paint the mural because it was designedto camouflage an existing eyesore on the building (a door that had been removed at an earlier date and bricked over.) Dave had a mason create a smooth surface for me over the brick and I painted the mural in the summer of 1998. I feel I have contributed something to the town that is deeply appreciated, expresses my love of nature and will endure.
My bio can be found on our website.http://www.muralsandmoldings.com
Artist: Adrienne Crombie
Town: Frenchtown, NJ
Year: 1998
Materials: acrylic on primed cement
To view Additional
Murals :http://www.muralsandmoldings.com/wall-murals.htm
Link to artist website:
http://www.muralsandmoldings.com/
Artists's Comments:
Inspiration:
I had recovered from Guillaime Barre Syndrome and moved back to my hometown at age forty. I had a vision of a healing garden and started collecting photos and imagery that corresponded with my vision. I met the owner of the building at 31 Bridge Street, David Miller, and told him what I wanted to do. We took got approval from the Planning Board to paint the mural because it was designedto camouflage an existing eyesore on the building (a door that had been removed at an earlier date and bricked over.) Dave had a mason create a smooth surface for me over the brick and I painted the mural in the summer of 1998. I feel I have contributed something to the town that is deeply appreciated, expresses my love of nature and will endure.
My bio can be found on our website.http://www.muralsandmoldings.com
Mural City of Pittsburgh, P.A., The Strip District
The scale of this mural is enormous.
Located in the Famous Strip District. The Strip District was formally the factory, warehouse/packing district vital to Pittsburgh's commerce.
The Strip hosts now open markets, Open Stage Theater, Arts, and Dining.
The Strip District is a prime example of urban renewal. This mural can be see as you travel Northeast into the district on Penn Avenue. The mural incorporatesthe theme that Pittsburgh is also known as the "City of Bridges". There is only one other city Venice, Italy that has more bridges.
Photograph by John J. Kuczynski, November 9th, 2008.
Located in the Famous Strip District. The Strip District was formally the factory, warehouse/packing district vital to Pittsburgh's commerce.
The Strip hosts now open markets, Open Stage Theater, Arts, and Dining.
The Strip District is a prime example of urban renewal. This mural can be see as you travel Northeast into the district on Penn Avenue. The mural incorporatesthe theme that Pittsburgh is also known as the "City of Bridges". There is only one other city Venice, Italy that has more bridges.
Photograph by John J. Kuczynski, November 9th, 2008.
The Farnsworth House, Bordentown, New Jersey
The Farnsworth House located on Farnsworth Avenue in Bordentown (City) NJ.
Attached is a picture of an al fresco mural painted on the side of a restaurant, The Farnsworth House. The current owner had this painted in 1995 to provide coverage for the side of the building, and also as marketing for the restaurant. Bordentown is a very historical city and the owner wanted to mural to reflect this. Peter Beiling, the artist, put this mural together using a rendition of Thomas Farnsworth. Thomas Farnsworth was a Quaker and acquired land in 1682 in Farnsworth Landing. This is now known as Bordentown. Since a picture of Thomas Farnsworth couldn't be found, the artist used what he considered to be Quaker. Rumor has it he may have used the picture from teh Quaker Oats box, but that can't be confirmed. The second picture is just a closer image of the bottom of the mural, featuring the city of Bordentown.
Photographed by:Christine Lachmanowicz
Attached is a picture of an al fresco mural painted on the side of a restaurant, The Farnsworth House. The current owner had this painted in 1995 to provide coverage for the side of the building, and also as marketing for the restaurant. Bordentown is a very historical city and the owner wanted to mural to reflect this. Peter Beiling, the artist, put this mural together using a rendition of Thomas Farnsworth. Thomas Farnsworth was a Quaker and acquired land in 1682 in Farnsworth Landing. This is now known as Bordentown. Since a picture of Thomas Farnsworth couldn't be found, the artist used what he considered to be Quaker. Rumor has it he may have used the picture from teh Quaker Oats box, but that can't be confirmed. The second picture is just a closer image of the bottom of the mural, featuring the city of Bordentown.
Photographed by:Christine Lachmanowicz
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Al Fresco Mural, Villa Mannino, Bordentown, N.J.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Mural-Artist is Natalie Whiting, New Jersey
This mural was painted by Natalie over 10 years ago just as she was retiring from her career as an English teacher with the North Hunterdon High School Regional School District, located at Rt. 31, Annandale, New Jersey.
The mural contains many of the images from the famous stories and fables we read and have all grown up with. The mural time table right to left, starting with the sun, and the Garden of Eden, Hamlet, Moby Dick, and the list goes on with nearly 30 stories. Can you guess which ones you remember?
During lunch breaks, after class, for nearly a year Natalie Whiting painted this mural that spans nearly 255 feet in length. Due to an illness her work slowed, but with the help of some students pitching in it was completed. Natalie dedicated this painting to those that inspired her, husband, students, and of course the mural says it all.
When researching this mural we were able to locate Natalie. She was impressed that no one ever painted over it, she never really considered in a piece of art. I was impressed by her undertaking and skill, And how appropriate that the mural covers the wall where students post their poetry.
To visit this mural, you will need permission by the school, and a school security escort, so please don’t just show up, shhhhhhhhhhh, children are learning.
Research and Photographs by: John J. Kuczynski
ARTIST COMMENTS:
The North Hunterdon High School English Department has most of its classrooms on the lower level of the school. It’s built into the hillside, which means the hallway was one long corridor of cement on one side, classrooms on the other. Students and faculty have long referred to it as “the Dungeon”. The wall is about 255’ long and perhaps 10’ high. I’m not sure anymore.
The thought behind the project was to make the dungeon wall a tapestry of the common readings of the four age groups, freshman to senior year, but over the years those readings may have changed.
I wanted it to look as if the wall were wiped away and the images were revealed beneath.
The tapestry starts at the east end of the hall and reads right to left, not for any intellectual reason, but when I started there were no classes at that end of the hall.
I wish I could give you the names of all the students who helped, but I’m afraid too much time has passed. Two Honor Society girls prepped he entire hallway. Students who had after school detention with me had to sit and watch or help me out. Some students truly added their own touches, but I have only one name---Michael Panella. He did the sunburst at the very start. Some of the members of the Thespian Troupe also worked on it between rehearsals. I’m hoping if your blog site goes up, credit can be attributed to those individuals. Cathy Benson of the Science Department helped with the horses.
I worked on it during my free periods, lunch, before and after school, and in the summer. The Board of Education paid for the paints and some brushes (under $500 I think), but I did most of the work. It went really fast at the beginning, but when my schedule changed, things slowed down. We had four minutes passing time, and my free periods were in 20-minute clips, which was too short a time to get out all the materials and clean up before the classes, moved. It was half done the first year, but took two more years to finish in 2002.
The ideas are a combination of textbook illustrations, textbook cover art, and my own head. Several of the characters are modeled after faculty members or students. (The red-haired angel staying Abraham’s knife is after my husband.)
I don’t know if the following is every book, but this is what I remember having not seen it in five years:
Genesis (Creation, Abraham and Isaac, Noah’s Ark, Moses at the burning bush, with tablets and the Golden Calf), Greek mythology (Hera and Zeus), the Iliad (the sack of Troy, the Lotus Eaters, the Cyclops, Circe, and Scylla, the Sea Monster, Penelope at her loom), the assassination of Julius Caesar, Beowulf fighting Grendel, Excalibur, Merlin, dueling knights, The Lady, Mac Beth’s witches, apparitions, and Lady Mac Beth, Chanticleer and the Fox, the Canterbury Pilgrims (only the firs eleven are identifiable), King Lear, Romeo and Juliet, Othello and Desdemona, Milton’s Paradise Lost (Angels casting the devils into the abyss), Pope’s Rape of the Lock, Gulliver in Brobdingnag, and Lilliput (with a few hymnyms thrown in), Blake’s Tiger burning bright in the forest of the night, and his chimney sweep, Coleridge’s albatross and ghost ship from the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Wordsworth’s Tintern Abbey, Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, Keats’s Grecian urn, assorted scenes from Dickens’ Great Expectations ( Magwitch, Estella, Miss Havisham, Pip, Walworth, Jaggers), Melville’s Queequeg about to harpoon Moby Dick, Poe’s raven upon the bust of Pallas, Hawthorn’s Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynn and Pearl, Roger Chillingworth, and Rev. Dimmesdale, Carroll’s white Rabbit, followed by the Mad Hatter’s tea party, Alice with the Caterpillar in the Garden, Huck Finn hunting and rafting with Jim, the Snows of Kilamanjaro, Ethan Fromm…..and I can’t remember the rest in order, but I know it includes The Great Gatsby, Brave New World, Catcher in the Rye, and A Raisin in the Sun.
I remember the end has cuneiform, the Rosetta Stone, and hieroglyphics before it melds into the library shelving. (That was to show the connection between writing and reading.)
I don’t remember signing it, but I know the administration liked it. They wanted me to do a kind of Sistine Cafeteria! It did cut down if not eliminate graffiti, and I hope it encouraged other areas to get students to use art to enhance their space.
For more photographs scroll down.
The mural contains many of the images from the famous stories and fables we read and have all grown up with. The mural time table right to left, starting with the sun, and the Garden of Eden, Hamlet, Moby Dick, and the list goes on with nearly 30 stories. Can you guess which ones you remember?
During lunch breaks, after class, for nearly a year Natalie Whiting painted this mural that spans nearly 255 feet in length. Due to an illness her work slowed, but with the help of some students pitching in it was completed. Natalie dedicated this painting to those that inspired her, husband, students, and of course the mural says it all.
When researching this mural we were able to locate Natalie. She was impressed that no one ever painted over it, she never really considered in a piece of art. I was impressed by her undertaking and skill, And how appropriate that the mural covers the wall where students post their poetry.
To visit this mural, you will need permission by the school, and a school security escort, so please don’t just show up, shhhhhhhhhhh, children are learning.
Research and Photographs by: John J. Kuczynski
ARTIST COMMENTS:
The North Hunterdon High School English Department has most of its classrooms on the lower level of the school. It’s built into the hillside, which means the hallway was one long corridor of cement on one side, classrooms on the other. Students and faculty have long referred to it as “the Dungeon”. The wall is about 255’ long and perhaps 10’ high. I’m not sure anymore.
The thought behind the project was to make the dungeon wall a tapestry of the common readings of the four age groups, freshman to senior year, but over the years those readings may have changed.
I wanted it to look as if the wall were wiped away and the images were revealed beneath.
The tapestry starts at the east end of the hall and reads right to left, not for any intellectual reason, but when I started there were no classes at that end of the hall.
I wish I could give you the names of all the students who helped, but I’m afraid too much time has passed. Two Honor Society girls prepped he entire hallway. Students who had after school detention with me had to sit and watch or help me out. Some students truly added their own touches, but I have only one name---Michael Panella. He did the sunburst at the very start. Some of the members of the Thespian Troupe also worked on it between rehearsals. I’m hoping if your blog site goes up, credit can be attributed to those individuals. Cathy Benson of the Science Department helped with the horses.
I worked on it during my free periods, lunch, before and after school, and in the summer. The Board of Education paid for the paints and some brushes (under $500 I think), but I did most of the work. It went really fast at the beginning, but when my schedule changed, things slowed down. We had four minutes passing time, and my free periods were in 20-minute clips, which was too short a time to get out all the materials and clean up before the classes, moved. It was half done the first year, but took two more years to finish in 2002.
The ideas are a combination of textbook illustrations, textbook cover art, and my own head. Several of the characters are modeled after faculty members or students. (The red-haired angel staying Abraham’s knife is after my husband.)
I don’t know if the following is every book, but this is what I remember having not seen it in five years:
Genesis (Creation, Abraham and Isaac, Noah’s Ark, Moses at the burning bush, with tablets and the Golden Calf), Greek mythology (Hera and Zeus), the Iliad (the sack of Troy, the Lotus Eaters, the Cyclops, Circe, and Scylla, the Sea Monster, Penelope at her loom), the assassination of Julius Caesar, Beowulf fighting Grendel, Excalibur, Merlin, dueling knights, The Lady, Mac Beth’s witches, apparitions, and Lady Mac Beth, Chanticleer and the Fox, the Canterbury Pilgrims (only the firs eleven are identifiable), King Lear, Romeo and Juliet, Othello and Desdemona, Milton’s Paradise Lost (Angels casting the devils into the abyss), Pope’s Rape of the Lock, Gulliver in Brobdingnag, and Lilliput (with a few hymnyms thrown in), Blake’s Tiger burning bright in the forest of the night, and his chimney sweep, Coleridge’s albatross and ghost ship from the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Wordsworth’s Tintern Abbey, Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, Keats’s Grecian urn, assorted scenes from Dickens’ Great Expectations ( Magwitch, Estella, Miss Havisham, Pip, Walworth, Jaggers), Melville’s Queequeg about to harpoon Moby Dick, Poe’s raven upon the bust of Pallas, Hawthorn’s Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynn and Pearl, Roger Chillingworth, and Rev. Dimmesdale, Carroll’s white Rabbit, followed by the Mad Hatter’s tea party, Alice with the Caterpillar in the Garden, Huck Finn hunting and rafting with Jim, the Snows of Kilamanjaro, Ethan Fromm…..and I can’t remember the rest in order, but I know it includes The Great Gatsby, Brave New World, Catcher in the Rye, and A Raisin in the Sun.
I remember the end has cuneiform, the Rosetta Stone, and hieroglyphics before it melds into the library shelving. (That was to show the connection between writing and reading.)
I don’t remember signing it, but I know the administration liked it. They wanted me to do a kind of Sistine Cafeteria! It did cut down if not eliminate graffiti, and I hope it encouraged other areas to get students to use art to enhance their space.
For more photographs scroll down.
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