Larger than life: mural Studies
june 8 – September 15, 2019

A mural study by Edward Laning that shows a man holding a rearing horse, a man feeding cows and a man leaning his elbow on a large blank sign with a capitol building in the background, all squared for transfer to a larger surface

Hours

Shop closes 15 minutes prior.

everyday art

This exhibition complemented “Celebrating Heroes: American Mural Studies of the 1930s and 1940s from the Steven and Susan Hirsch Collection,” organized by the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College. President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal programs included several designed to employ artists in a variety of fields, paying them to paint murals across the country. They made many of their best known murals for post offices, under the U.S. Treasury Department’s Section of Fine Arts. Murals were and are works of art that we often encounter in our everyday lives, which makes it easy for them to spark controversy when times change. It also means they bring fine art into the public sphere, inspiring us to go about our day-to-day business.

 

Curator
Annelies Mondi, deputy director

Sponsors
The W. Newton Morris Charitable Foundation and the Friends of the Georgia Museum of Art