American Artists, Past and Present, January 9-February 9, 1943
Scope and Contents
An exhibition surveying the development of American artists since the eighteenth century, featuring works on loan, as well as from the museum’s permanent collection, including 14 new acquisitions.
The exhibition records span three folders and include object descriptions, planning correspondence, and registration receipts.
Dates
- Creation: January 9-February 9, 1943
Conditions Governing Access
At this time, the exhibition records are unavailable to the public and will only be made available to FAMSF staff upon request.
Biographical / Historical
The United States' rich artistic history stretches from the earliest indigenous cultures to the more recent globalization of contemporary art. Centuries before the first European colonizers, Native American peoples had crafted ritual and utilitarian objects that reflected the natural environment and their beliefs. After the arrival of Europeans, artists looked to European tendencies in portraiture and landscape painting to craft representations of the new land, but it was not until the middle of the 19th century with the Hudson River School that American artists were considered to have launched a cohesive movement. Through the early 20th century, artists still took cues from European avant-garde groups but increasingly focused on the denizens of American urban centers and the more rural Midwest. After World War II, the artists that comprised the Abstract Expressionist movement found international fame and notoriety, and for the first time, American artistic influence moved abroad, and later Minimalism and Pop Art greatly impacted the art world. Subsequently, with various global art centers and international connections, it is now more difficult to point to a specific American art trend, although one can still chart the influence of American artists in the global art sphere.
Source: https://www.theartstory.org/definition/american-art/
Extent
0.1 Linear Feet (The exhibition records span three folders.)
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Abstract
An exhibition surveying the development of American artists since the eighteenth century. The exhibition records span three folders.
Arrangement
The materials are separated by content and type and organized chronologically.
Separated Materials
Clipping San Francisco Chronicle January 17, 1943 p. 32.
Cultural context
Temporal
Topical
Repository Details
Part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Archives Repository
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr
San Francisco California 94118 USA