Exhibitions: Printed Art: Pictures & Designs That Work.

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On View: Shepherd Tending His Flock

The son of farmers, Millet understood both the reassuring cycle of the seasons and the frightening prospect of ruin at nature’s whim. ...

Hiroshige's One Hundred Famous Views of Edo

Hiroshige's 118 woodblock landscape and genre scenes of mid-nineteenth-century Tokyo, is one of the greatest achievements of Japanese art.

    On View: Grey Area (Brown version)

    Fred Wilson often appropriates art objects to explore issues of race, gender, class, politics, and aesthetics. Made up of five portrait head...

     

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    Printed Art: Pictures & Designs That Work.

    Press Releases ?
    • March 28, 1941: The Brooklyn Museum, which has long been famous for its recognition of contemporary art, American as well international, is going a step farther this summer in a comprehensive exhibition called “Printed Art.” It will emphasize the excellence attained in the form of art most familiar to the general public, the art designed to be turned out by power presses. An appropriate subtitle for the exhibition could be “Day to Day Art” or “The People’s Daily Art Gallery.”

      The exhibition is being designed to show the many problems so-called “commercial” artist is up against in producing work for business and how well they can be solved.

      This will involve showing outstanding work in the advertising, poster, packaging, magazine, newspaper and book illustrating, printed decorative accessories and lithographic fields. There will be displays of at least one example from each category showing the entire process form the artist’s first sketch through the proof to the finished product. It is planned to have this show well and thoroughly labelled so that the layman can easily comprehend it.

      The Committee now working on it are Laurance P. Roberts, Director of the Brooklyn Museum; Ralph Walker, architect; Edward A. Wilson, illustrator; George Welp of Interchemical Corporation; and C. A. Breskin, publisher of “Modern Packaging.” The show will open May 29, and continue through the middle September.

      Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1939 - 1941. 01-03/1941, 074. View Original

    • May 25, 1941: EXHIBITION “PRINTED ART - PICTURES AND DESIGNS THAT WORK” OPENS AT THE BROOKLYN MUSEUM THURSDAY, MAY 29, TO THE PUBLIC AFTER THE INVITATION PREVIEW WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 28, - AN EXHIBITION OF THE ART THE PUBLIC SEES EVER DAY AND THAT IS PRODUCED BY THE POWER PRESS; HOW IT IS CRATED AS CONTRASTED WITH THE "SELF EXPRESSION" WORK DONE BY ARTISTS FOR THEIR OWN SATISFACTION.

      An exhibition that demonstrates the excellent work done specifically for the power press in practical fields of business and industry, will be held at the Brooklyn Museum from May 29 through the summer. It will be made up of examples selected from the enormous quantities of art the public, including the large part which never enters an art gallery, sees every day without realizing it. The exhibition will not include art done purely as forms of “self-expression.” It is called “Printed Art - Pictures and Designs that Work,” and opens to the public Thursday, May 29, after an invitation preview late Wednesday afternoon, May 28.

      It will not be a printing show nor duplicate advertising art exhibitions, although both of these elements will present. It will show what the artist does in the production of the wide variety of objects produced by the power press. The show falls into five main divisions: magazine and newspaper illustration, advertising illustration, packaging, book illustration, and a section called “Variety Show” composed of dress, drapery and neckware fabrics; lunch cloths; wall paper and coated wall covering; fancy wrapping paper; oil cloth shelf edging, covered asbestos stove pad, table scarf and chair cushion; paper cups and plates; shower curtains; string holders; and tin trays and canisters.

      Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1939 - 1941. 04-06/1941, 118. View Original

    • May 29, 1941: An exhibition to encourage a wider appreciation of the excellent work done specifically for the power press in practical fields of business and industry, will be held at the Brooklyn Museum from May 29th through the summer. The Museum wishes to point out that the general public sees enormous quantities of art every day without realizing it and without ever entering any of hundreds of exhibitions devoted yearly to the exposition of art productions done purely as forms of self-expression. The Museum show will be called “Printed Art” and the subtitle might be “Day to Day Art,“ “The Art the Public Sees Every Day” or “Art That Works.”

      This will not be another printing show or Art Directors’ Exhibition, although both of these elements will be present. The show falls into five main divisions: magazine and newspaper illustration, advertising illustration, packaging, book illustration, and miscellaneous objects such as wall covering, oil cloth, textiles, and the like. In other words, as many phases as possible of illustration and design will be represented, the common limitation being that none are complete until they come off the power press in large or small runs.

      The Committee selected to advise the Museum in this activity is: George Welp, Promotion Manager of the Interchemical Corporation; Edward A. Wilson, illustrator and designer; C. A. Breskin, publisher of “Modern Packaging”; Ralph Walker, architect; and James R. Patterson, Supervisor of Interior Design, Pratt Institute.

      Advertising agencies, magazines, artists, designers, type and printing companies, the Lithographers’ National Association, Inc., and The American Institute of Graphic Arts have all been drawn on, all of whom are lending material generously. Pratt Institute’s able crew of exhibition installers have charge of the physical setting up of the show.

      The space devoted to it will be the Museum’s Special Exhibition Gallery,  a commodious series of galleries just off the Entrance Hall. Plans at present envisage in the first small gallery an exposition of the three basic printing processes, which is being set up by Time, Inc. because of the use of all three processes in each issue of “Fortune”, in the large central gallery - magazine, newspaper and advertising illustration, packaging and display; in the next room, a small gallery - wall coverings and textiles; and in the last large square gallery - book illustration and other exhibits.

      As a special feature in each division it is planned to have an exhibit of the complete process, from the art director’s letter or order, if possible, through sketches and changes to press proofs and the finished work. This is considered particularly important in this exhibition, as one of the objects is to show the problems that have to be met and solved by the artist, art director and printer, as opposed to the condition under which an artist works who creates in the seclusion of his studio with no one to impose specifications but himself.

      Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1939 - 1941. 04-06/1941, 092-3. View Original 1 . View Original 2

    • May 29, 1941: “Printed Art - Pictures and Designs that Work” - an exhibition of the products of the power press pointing out that the public is in daily contact with art, opened at the Brooklyn Museum yesterday afternoon (Wednesday, May 28), with an invitation preview for Museum members and lenders of material for the show. It is open to the public today and will remain on view through October 18.

      The exhibition was made possible through the efforts of Charles A. Breskin, Publisher of “Modern Packaging,” George Welp, head of the Promotion Department of Interchemical Corporation, and Edward A. Wilson, well-known magazine, advertising and book illustrator, who composed the Committee of Selection. An assisting group was made up Laurance P. Roberts, Director of the Brooklyn Museum, Theodore D. Starr, Jr., Editor of the Museum, and Arthur H. Torrey and Tay Hohoff, originators of the exhibition. James R. Patterson, head of the Interior Design Department of Pratt Institute, and a group of eight students from Pratt Institute, are responsible for the staging and styling of the show.

      The exhibition is made up of a graphic explanation of the three basic printing processes; newspaper and magazine editorial and advertising design, illustration and typography; direct mail and display pieces; posters; packages and containers; textiles; special papers; wallpapers and coated fabric coverings; and book illustration.

      ( THE GALLERIES )
      The long series of four Special Exhibition Galleries are devoted to the subject. Next to the Gallery entrance is a panel defining the limits of the show and in the first gallery, a small one, the three basic printing processes are explained simply.

      The first thing to catch the eye in the main gallery is a screen across the center aisle with a large hole in the center which narrows the view to a long vista, climaxed in the end gallery by a tall inverted cone of fabrics illuminated by footlights. The intervening wall spaces have dark blue, yellow and red backgrounds and varying ingenious methods of display. Many of the exhibits are framed in glossy white mats. Free use is made of simply worded labels, easy to read.

      The show emphasizes the importance of the large amount of “working” art that is issued by the power press and the part the artist plays in its creation. It also demonstrates that there is an enormous demand in this country for the artist’s skill. As the work shown is not complete until it comes off the press, originals are included only to emphasize a point, as they are usually prepared by the artist with printing in mind and not to be seen in their original form. In many cases the entire page of the publication is exhibited to show how the art work looks when placed in the setting for which it was commissioned.

      (FIRST EXHIBIT)
      The first exhibit, next to the entrance, is a lighted panel on which is hung an oil painting, a water color, an etching, a printed reproduction of a painting not done originally to be printed, and a photograph with a legend explaining that the exhibition is not about any of these.

      (BASIC PRINTING PROCESSES)
      In the first gallery the visitor sees a demonstration of primer simplicity of the three basic printing processes: relief, intaglio and planography. This is done by graphs, drawings, original paintings, printing plates and large models of printing rollers, all supplied by “Fortune” magazine which uses all three processes in each issue. This exhibit was put together by two students, Fred Grobe and Theodore Garing, who are taking the advertising course at Pratt Institute.

      (WORK FROM NEWSPAPERS)
      Work shown from newspapers includes feature strips in black-and-white as well as color, “tear sheets” taken from recent issues of New York papers, store fashion advertising, “before and after” copies of a newspaper recently redesigned by Norman Bel Geddes (The New York Post), a copy of “PM” designed by T. C. Clelland, and a double color page from the largest color rotogravure “run” in the country (the Sunday New York Daily News). A special exhibit is made up of each step in the creation and production of the feature strip “Flash Gordon” by Alex Raymond. Another is an original and proof sheets of one of the “Dickie Dare” features done by Coulton Waugh.

      (MAGAZINE WORK)
      Magazine work includes covers, illustrations for stories shown in place on the complete page, fashion illustration and advertisements. One of the exhibits is the series of color proofs of a cover for “Collier’s” by Jon Whitcomb.

      (DIRECT MAIL)
      In the direct mail section are booklets, proof sheets of a booklet, an original cover design and the printed result, and famous mail order catalogues. A booklet sent out by a major radio network exemplifies the use of printed art by a competing medium.

      ( POSTERS)
      Posters include car cards, travel posters, and one for a department store. Three big posters fill the end walls, of which one was done by George Howe for the restyled circus, and two are from the American Railway Express Agency designed by Carl Burger for two sizes of trucks, pointing out a problem of design that must make one picture usable as a unit in whole and in part.

      (PACKAGES AND DISPLAYS)
      Arranged with the cases of packages is a platform of counter and window displays. The packages were selected to cover as many different familiar uses as space allowed of well-designed packages and containers.

      (BOOK ILLUSTRATION)
      The third gallery is devoted to “The Techniques of Book Illustration” prepared by the American Institute of Graphic Arts. It shows several of the principal methods of creating original art work and of reproducing it for illustration in books. The three sections are called “The Artist Makes the Printing Surface,” “The Artist’s Work Reproduced Photo-Mechanically” and “Artists and Photo-Mechanical Technicians Work Together.”

      (“VARIETY SHOW”)
      “Variety Show,” with special lighting, is the climax of the exhibition in the last gallery. In the center of the room, reaching from a low platform nearly to the ceiling, is an inverted cone of lengths of dress, drapery and neckwear fabrics illuminated dramatically from below by light around the platform.

      By varying ingenious display methods of curving walls, broken surfaces and lighted wall cases groups of objects are shown which include lunch cloths; wallpapers, some with complementary chintzes of the same pattern; oil cloths; coated fabrics; fancy wrapping papers; Christmas cards; playing cards; cocktail napkins; tin trays and canisters; string holders; and a kitchen-dinette corner on a platform employing coated fabrics in the form of a table scarf, a chair cushion, covered asbestos stove pad and shelf edging.

      The list of lenders includes artists, publishers, newspapers and newspaper syndicates, magazines, advertising agencies, engraving and printing establishments, motion picture companies, textile and wallpaper houses, manufacturers of coated fabrics, playing cards, pottery, decorative wrapping papers and paper cups, a railway company, an express company and a department store, Modern Packaging Exhibition and the permanent exhibition of “Living Lithography” at the New York Trade School.

      Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1939 - 1941. 04-06/1941, 121-4. View Original 1 . View Original 2 . View Original 3 . View Original 4

    • Date unknown, approximately 1941: "DESIGN IN PRINTING FOR DECORATION AND APPAREL" from "Printed Art -- Pictures and Designs That Work"

      TEXTILES
      One-color cotton print (3 swatches, green, red and blue) designed by Ameritex from Pennsylvania Dutch fabric in Brooklyn Museum Collection. Roller print.
      6 examples from a line of spun rayon and cotton, Galey & Lord. Designed from Mexican pottery stamps in Brooklyn Museum Collection, with fabric texture and colors suggested by ancient Peruvian textiles in the Museum collection.
      3 printed wall coverings; Famous Houses, white on blue; gray ivy leafe on white; green flower - Standard Coated Products
      Table cloth - Standard Coated Products
      Pot holders, shelf edging, large piece, red and white - Standard Coated Products
      5 Shower curtains - screen and roller printed - Para Manufacturing Co.
      Wallpaper panel produced by lithography by Schmitz-Horning Co., - Courtesy N.Y. Trade School Living Lithography Exhibition
      3 pieces wallpaper, designs by Ilonka Krasz - Katzenbach & Warren
      1 piece wallpaper, design by Binnie B. Wilson - screen printed - Han-tec, Inc.
      2 coordinated wallpapers and glazed chintz - screen printed - F. Schumacher & Co.
      4 prize-winning luncheon cloths, from a national competition - screen printed - Fallini & Cohn
      6 examples of adaptations from Van Gogh paintings, for dress fabrics - Celanese Corporation of America
      6-color roller print on bright satin, dull background achieved by pigment in the pink blotch - Celanese Corporation of America
      3-color screen print - 2 examples - Celanese Corporation
      4-color screen print - Celanese Corporation
      2-roller print; woolly effect achieved in spun yarn, fabric printed with a simulation of woven pattern - Celanese Corporation
      5-color roller print - Celanese Corporation
      Multi-color print, produced by three rollers carrying primary colors plus black and gray; rollers engraved by photographic color separation method - Celanese Corporation
      4-roller prints for neckwear fabrics designed by William E. Probert for Celanese Corporation Men’s Wear Department
      5-color roller print; 3-color screen; single color steel engraved roller print; 5-color roller print - Cohn-Hall-Marx Co.

      DECORATIVE FABRICS
      6 screen prints - J. H. Thorpe & Co.
      2 screen prints - Johnson & Faulkner
      1 screen print - Carillo Fabrics Co.
      1 roller print- Atkinson Wade & Co.
      1 screen print - F. Schumacher & Co.

      PAPER OBJECTS
      Plates, towels, napkins, cups, cups with handles - Dennison Mfg. Co.; Lily Tulip; Dixie Vortex
      Champagne bucket - L.N. Renault & Sons
      Gift Wrappings and printed tapes - Dennison Mfg. Co. & Chicago Printed String Co.

      METAL
      Candy box and tray - Courtesy N.Y. Trade School Living Lithography

      KITCHEN CORNER
      Table cloth designed by Helen Jurgens - Fallini Bros
      Seat cushion - Standard Coated Products Co.
      Printed towel and Metal Waste Basket
      Window and curtains, designed and executed by Pratt Students


      Examples of PACKAGES in “Printed Art -- Pictures and Designs That Work”

      ON WALL
      Kleenex tissue boxes - 2, red, green
      Calox Tooth Powder box
      Spalding “Kro-flite” golf ball package
      Colgate Dental Cream box
      Cannon Cavalier Percale - one package of two pillow cases
      Virginia Dare Wine box.

      IN FIRST CASE
      The Topper men’s toilet preparation package - McKesson
      Men’s toilet preparation package - Seaforth
      Cologne and Scented Balm bottles - Charles of the Ritz
      Six toilet preparation packages - Charles of the Ritz
      Djer-Kiss perfume package - Kerkoff
      Djer-Kiss bath powder package - Kerkoff
      Christmas package (alphabet block) - Peck & Peck

      IN SECOND CASE
      Swan’s Down flour package - Igleheart Bros.
      Golden Crest Milk Bottle - Borden’s
      Golden Blossm Honey tin - John G. Paton Co. Inc.
      Bokar Coffee bag - Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.
      Eight O’Clock Coffee bag - Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.
      “Gay Nineties” Fruit Cake tin - packed for B. Altman & Co.
      Karo - 3 bottles (plain, crystal white, waffle syrup) - Corn Products Refining Co.
      Early American herbs (wooden box, earthenware jars) - Cresca Co.
      Early American herbs (glass jars in wooden standing box) - Cresca Co.
      Early American herbs (Preserved Ginger jar and box) - Cresca Co.
      Early American herbs (honey, 3 kinds, in jars) - Cresca Co.
      Bon Ami de luxe package
      Confection boxes, 3 - Georges de Met
      Rennet Powder, 3 boxes - Hansen Laboratories
      Freezing Mix, 1 box - Hansen Laboratories
      Paprika can - McCormick Co.
      Crushed Red Pepper can - McCormick Co.

      IN THIRD CASE
      Croft Cream Ale, quart can
      Feigenspan XXX Amber Ale, quart bottle - Feigenspan Brewing Co.
      Boston Light Beer Bottle - Boston Beer Co.
      Boston Light Beer can - Boston Beer Co.
      Pipe Tobacco can, Bond Street - Philip Morris Co.
      Cigarette package - Spud
      Cigarette package - Cort
      Smoking Tobacco tin - Sir Walter Raleigh
      Tobacco tins, large and small, Willoughby Taylor
      Cook’s Imperial American Muscatell bottle - American Wine Co.
      Cook’s Imperial American Sparkling Burgundy bottle - American Wine Co.
      Cook’s Imperial American Champagne box - American Wine Co.
      Old Mariner Whiskey bottle - Century Distilling Co.
      Lord Calvert Whiskey bottle - Calvert Distilling Co.
      Calvert gin bottle - Calvert Distilling Co.
      Harmony gin bottle - Carstairs Brothers


      Examples of POSTERS, MAGAZINE COVERS, FASHION ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, ETC. in “Printed Art -- Pictures and Designs That Work”

      POSTERS
      American Railway Express - by Carl Burger. “Tiger” poster in two sizes - lithography
      Ringling Brothers Circus - by George Howe - lithography
      New York, New Haven & Hartford R.R. - two examples - by Sascha Maurer (Engine and Ski-er) - lithography
      Rural Electrification Administration - by Lester Boall - two examples - silk screen.
      L. Bamberger & Co. - by Stanley Crane - Thanksgiving - silk screen.
      Rom - by Bernhard - two car cards - lithography
      Southern Pacific R.R. - by Ray Bothers - West Coast of Mexico - lithography

      MAGAZINE COVERS
      Vogue - by Miguel Covarrubias
      Saturday Review of Literature - by McKnight Kauffer
      Saturday Evening Post - Norman Rockwell
      New Yorker - by Roger Duvoisin
      Collier’s - by Jon Whitcomb, with color plates.

      MAPS, BOOK JACKETS, CHRISTMAS AND PLAYING CARDS, ETC.
      Vogue press sheets. One side of a 32 page form - black; red; black and red; yellow; black, red, yellow; blue; final.
      Book jackets by McKnight Kauffer for Modern Library
      Cover of an Exhibition catalogue (Annual Reports and Anniversary booklets) - Lakeside Press
      Promotion booklet showing tipped-in print of lithograph by Thomas Benton for “Grapes of Wrath” - Twentieth Century Fox
      Road map of New Jersey - Sunoco promotion
      “America: Between Two Covers” - map made for Saturday Evening Post by V. Bobri
      Christmas cards - American Artists Group
      Playing Cards - Justin Sands - U.S. Playing Card Co.


      Examples of ART WORK FROM NEWSPAPERS in “Printed Art - - Pictures and Designs That Work”

      Black and white original drawing and color painting for “Jungle Jim” and “Flash Gordon”, with color progress proofs. King Features Syndicate
      Scenarios and black and white proof of “Little Miss Muffet” - King Features Syndicate
      Alligator Hunt in the Everglades, colored picture feature advertisement for Eveready Batteries.
      Original and proof of “Dickie Dare” feature by Coulton Waugh - Associated Features Syndicate
      Tarzan strip in black and white, four panels ## 523 through 528 - United Press Syndicate.
      St. Louis Post-Dispatch proof, showing use of lithographs in a page-size advertisement for “The Long Voyage Home”. Also page of color reproductions of same from “Esquire”
      2 Double page spreads in color from Sunday News, of No. 26, 1939 and Feb. 4, 1940, showing respectively - armor, drawn by Speed and Haden, staff artists, and Women’s Fashions in War Times.
      Color photograph of News color roto press
      Color roto advertisement for Steinway pianos by Robert Phillip
      Abraham & Straus advertisement , from N.Y. Herald-Tribune (tearsheet)
      Front page of N.Y. post, March 1, 1939 shown together with front page of Post after redesigning by Norman Bel Geddes (April 39, ’41)
      Front page of Brooklyn Eagle, May 27, 1941.
      Front page of P M, May 27, 1941
      12 Denys Wortman “Everyday Movies” - United Feature Syndicate.


      Examples of MAGAZINE ADVERTISING in “Printed Art -- Pictures and Designs That Work”

      ILLUSTRATION by
      Grohe and Walt Disney Studios - for Interchemical Corporation. Fortune advertisement, complete process from rough layout through semi-comprehensive layout, original art work, layout with instructions for engraver, typed copy, type proof, head-line lettering, Walt Disney Pinocchio color sketch, progress color proofs, proof of black plate from publication, engraver’s final proof, completed advertisement.
      A. M. Cassandre - for Container Corporation of America
      Zadig - for U.S. Pipe & Foundry Co.
      Melbourne Brindle - for Hawaiian Tourist Bureau
      Gluyas Williams - for U. S. Steel
      John Falter - for Pall Mall Cigarettes
      Dan Content - for Seagram Distillers Inc.
      Dean Cornwell - for U.S. Pipe & Foundry Co.
      James E. Allen - for U.S. Pipe & Foundry Co.
      Peter Helck - for Thomas Edison Inc.
      Peter Hawley - for H. J. Heinz Co.
      Haddon Sunbloom - for Kelvinator Corp.
      Rockwell Kent - Lithograph - for Interchemical Corporation
      Peter Helck - for Crowell Publishing Co.
      Melbourne Brindle - for Hawaiian Tourist Bureau
      Buk Ulreich - for Cannon Mills Inc.
      Steven Dohanos - for The Barret Company
      Ernest Fiene - for De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd.
      Sidney E. Fletcher - for Sanderson & Porter
      Edmundson - for Houbigant
      Buk Ulreich - for Cannon Mils, Inc.
      A. M. Cassandre - for Hawaiian Pineapple Co. Ltd.
      Robert Fawcett - for U.S. Steel
      Georgia O’Keefe - for Hawaiian Pineapple Co. Ltd.
      Tearsheet by Jury - for Maryland Casualty Co.
      Tearsheet by Jury - for American Insurance Group.


      Examples of MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATION in “Printed Art - Pictures and Designs That Work”

      ILLUSTRATION for:
      Cosmopolitan by George Evan s. Complete process; letter from editor, letter in answer from artist, telegram incorporating editorial suggestions, first sketch, finished painting, proofs, and copy of magazine open at page showing illustration. (story by George F. Worts & Schuyler C. Schenck.)
      Collier’s by Earl Blossom (story by Grover Jones)
      Collier’s by Robert O. Reid (story by Richard English)
      Woman’s Home Companion, by Harry Anderson (story by S. C. Schenck)
      Woman’s Home Companion, by Harold von Schmidt (story by Carolyn Darling)
      Collier’s by Ronald McLeon (story by Joseph Hergesheinier)
      Collier’s by Hardie Gramatky (article by Quentin Reynolds)
      Collier’s by Henry Raleigh (story by Gene Henry)
      Collier’s by William Meade Prince (six small proofs on one page)
      House & Garden by David Payne
      Fortune by Allen Saalburg
      Woman’s Home Company by Norman Rockwell (story by Elizabeth Goudge)
      Saturday Evening Post by Floyd Davis (story by John Fante)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Saul Tepper (story by Pearl Buck)
      Fortune by A. M. Cassandre (two suggestions for posters)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Pruett Carter (story by William E. Wilson)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Helen Hokinson (play by Sophie Kerr)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Jon Whitcomb (story by Fannie Kilbourne)
      Saturday Evening Post by Steven Dohanos (story by Barre Lyndon)
      Fortune by Georges Schreiber
      Fortune by Harry Sternberg
      Fortune by Harry Sternberg
      Collier’s by George Howe (story by Frederick Hazlitt Brennan)
      Vogue by Ludwig Bemelman (“War Relief Ball at the Ritz”)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Floyd Davis (story by Louise D. Rich)
      Woman’s Home Companion by Alfred Parker
      Collier’s by Earl Oliver Hurst (story by Jan Fortune)
      Collier’s (Cartoons - 15) and one by Garrett Price with first sketch, finished drawing, line-cut plate, and tear sheet.

      Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1939 - 1941. 04-06/1941, 135-40. View Original 1 . View Original 2 . View Original 3 . View Original 4 . View Original 5 . View Original 6

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      Prints, Drawings and Photographs

      Over the years, the collections of the Brooklyn Museum have been organized and reorganized in different ways. Collections of the former Department of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs include works on paper that may fall into other categories: American Art, European Art, Asian Art, Contemporary Art, and Photography.
      The Brooklyn Museum Archives maintains a collection of historical press releases. Many of these have been scanned and made available on our Web site. The releases range from brief announcements to extensive articles; images of the original releases have been included for your reference. Please note that all the original typographical elements, including occasional errors, have been retained. Releases may also contain errors as a result of the scanning process. We welcome your feedback about corrections.
      For select exhibitions, we have made available some or all of the informative text panels written by the curator or organizer. Called "didactics," these panels are presented to the public during the exhibition's run, and we reproduce them here for your reference and archival interest. Please note that any illustrations on the original didactics have not been retained, and that the text may contain errors as a result of the scanning process. We welcome your feedback about corrections.
      For select exhibitions, we have made available some or all of the objects from the Brooklyn Museum collection that were in the installation. These objects are listed here for your reference and archival interest, but the list may be incomplete and does not contain objects owned by other institutions or lenders.
      This section utilizes the New York Times API in order to display related materials in New York Times publications.