The Works Progress Administration’s Federal Art Project (WPA/FAP), part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal to stimulate the economy and create jobs during the Great Depression, employed thousands of artists between 1935 and 1943 to create artworks for public spaces. This groundbreaking democratic experiment celebrated and supported American art and artists by providing a source of income, enhancing public buildings, and enriching the lives of Americans in the throes of the Great Depression.
The Art Commission reviewed hundreds of Federal Art Project commissions during this period, including murals, sculpture and mosaics. A significant portion of the WPA/FAP commissions in our collection were installed in public health and hospital facilities. There is a noticeable shift in theme and tone depending on the location of murals. Murals in children’s wards often focused on nursery rhymes and fanciful themes, while those in nurses’ recreation rooms were “relaxing” and focused on familial scenes. Murals in doctors’ recreation rooms focused on the history and progress of medicine, while those in psychiatric wards sought to provide therapy for mental distress.