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Special Collections Exhibit Women Artists in the WPA Collection

Women Artists in the WPA Collection


Gladys Carambella, Jolan Gross-Bettelheim, and Dorothy Rutka


During the 1930s, there was catastrophic unemployment in the country. A federal project was put in place in 1935, called "Work Projects Administration" which would utilize the skills of out-of-work employees helping them to earn a small wage to survive. In Cuyahoga country alone, 47,000 people were assigned to work on a variety of projects from the Cleveland Zoo, the waterworks, highways and streets, the airport, to the parks, recreation sites, cultural gardens and public housing. Previous efforts had begun in 1933, to assist unemployed artists under the Public Works of Art Project established by the Treasury Department. The country was divided into sixteen regions, one of which was the Cleveland region. Two people were instrumental in the success of the Cleveland effort William M. Milliken, Director of the Cleveland Museum of Art and Linda A. Eastman, Director of the Cleveland Public Library. The significant benefit of their collaboration and leadership was a regional approach to art that exemplified and identified the "Cleveland Scene." In 1935, the Works Progress Administration, took over the support of artists on relief and hired hundreds of workers for the Federal Art Project in music, theater, writing and art, the Federal Art Project alone employed 350 Cleveland artists. The WPA projects were discontinued in the early 1940s due to the consequences and effects of the wartime economy.

The Cleveland artists were creating murals, mural sketches, easel paintings, ceramic sculpture, plaques, sculpture, graphic arts and photographs as well as furniture and toys . Women played a significant role in the creation and composition of the art that was produced. In an exhibit catalog entitled Federal Art in Cleveland 1933-1943, for the Cleveland Public Library exhibit in 1974, 21 women were listed as active artists in the program. In the Department of Special Collections, representative works of seven women are included in the WPA Print Collection: Joln Gross-Bettelheim, Gladys Carambella, Alice Haber, Florence Korda, Antonina Mancuso, Marguerite Root, and Dorothy Rutka. Three of these artists have works that are highlighted in this exhibit: Joln Gross-Bettelheim, Gladys Carambella, and Dorothy Rutka.

Joln Gross-Bettelheim (1900-1972) came to the United States after studying in Budapest, Vienna, Berlin and Paris. Moving to Cleveland in 1925 she became a student of Henry Keller at the Cleveland School of Art. She was active in art circles, participating in the May Shows at the Cleveland Museum of Art and joined the WPA arts project in 1936. In 1938 she moved to New York where she lived until 1959 when she returned to her native Hungary. Her works were very popular and were shown in major exhibits across the United States. Her prints are powerful political statements incorporating industrial subjects of mills, bridges and factories.


 Blast Furnace
Dilapidated Section
Employment Line
Blast Furnace Dilapidated Section Employment Office
 Factory Houses
 Gates and Bridges
 Industial Section
Factory Houses Gates and Bridges Industrial Section
 Yard with Poles
 Yard
 Under the High Level Bridge
Yard with Poles Yard Under the High Level Bridge

Dorothy Rutka (1907-1985) moved from Michigan to enroll in the Cleveland School of Art, graduating in 1929. She worked as a portrait painter, a writer and illustrator before joining the graphic arts project with the WPA in 1936. Her works were included in major exhibits as well as solo exhibitions around the country. The prints in our collection exhibit her sensitive portrayal of of cultural aspects of society as well as the poverty and deprivation of those suffering from the effects of the Depression, as obvious from the titles "Poverty," "Eviction," "Striker's Wife." She was married to Philip Porter, executive editor of the Plain Dealer. Tragically, they were killed by intruders in their home in Shaker Heights.


 Applecreek Farmer
Conference
Dead Trees
Applecreek Farmer Conference Dead Trees
 Department Store
 Eviction
 Flood
Department Store Eviction Flood
 Melting Pot
Negro Head
 Siesta
Melting Pot Negro Head Siesta
 Strike Talk
 Strikers Wife
 Under bridges
Strike Talk Striker's Wife Under Bridges
 Poverty
Poverty

Gladys Carambella, was a talented artist interested in illustrating children's stories. She began as a ceramics artist in the WPA project, trained by Edris Eckhardt, a professional ceramicist and sculptor. Carambella was best known as a designer of murals for schools, nurseries and hospitals. Her murals could be found in many locations in Cuyahoga county. In the Prospectus of Work for Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority in 1939, her sketches for "Christmas Day," "Thumbelina," and "Snow Queen" were included. Her prints in our WPA collection are colorful and charming scenes of children and depictions of Children's stories.


 Eskimo Children
Mowgli and His Brothers
Navajo Children
Eskimo Children Mowgli and His Brothers Navajo Children
 Snow White and Rose Red
Snow White and Rose Red

For further information:

Landau, Ellen G. Social Realism in the 1930s: WPA prints in Cleveland. Curated by the CWRU Undergraduate Art History Majors Seminar under the direction of Professor Ellen G. Landau. Booklet accompanying the exhibit, 1992.

Marling, Karal Ann et al. Federal Art in Cleveland 1933-1943. Cleveland Public Library, 1974. Exhibit catalog accompanying the exhibit, 1974.

Robinson, William H. and David Steinberg, et al. Transformations in Cleveland Art 1796-1946. Community and Diversity in Early Modern America. Cleveland Museum of Art, 1996. Exhibit catalog accompanying the exhibit, 1996.

Van Tassel, David and John Grabowski. The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Indiana University Press, 1987 and 1996.

Last updated on 3/17/2005