All posts tagged: New Deal

How the New Deal Treated Art as Essential to Democracy

How the New Deal Treated Art as Essential to Democracy

Imagine a world where an artist is considered an essential worker. The government commissions murals and sculptures for schools, libraries, and hospitals. Taxes fund free classes in pottery and printmaking at a community art center. The president of the United States promotes art as vital to a healthy democracy.  This world flickered into view between 1933 and 1943, a decade when the US government treated art as a public resource rather than a private luxury. The output was staggering: hundreds of thousands of artworks—murals, paintings, sculptures, prints, and photographs—by then-unknown artists like Willem de Kooning, Philip Guston, Lee Krasner, Jacob Lawrence, Alice Neel, Louise Nevelson, Isamu Noguchi, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko. They belonged to the era’s bold vision of cultural democracy: art by the people, for the people. Related Articles This vision rose from a nightmare: the Great Depression. By the time Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933, three and a half years after the stock market crash, nearly a quarter of the American workforce had lost their jobs. The banking system …

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

In the United States today, officials at all levels of government generally act as if private enterprise is the only way to provide goods and services. Yet a bastion of public ownership survives: more than a quarter of electricity customers—including the residents of Los Angeles, Omaha, San Antonio, Seattle, Jacksonville, and Tupelo, along with tens of millions of other people—get their power from one of the country’s more than 2,500 publicly owned utilities and rural electric cooperatives. Mostly established in the first half of the twentieth century, these institutions have a long record of offering reliable service at affordable rates; even today, publicly owned utilities charge less and resolve outages faster on average than their investor-owned counterparts. Creating more like them, however, has been extraordinarily difficult. Since the 1940s, few communities have successfully taken control of their private utilities; one such example is the city of Massena, New York, which waged a seven-year political and legal fight before taking over its power grid from Niagara Mohawk in 1981. Residents immediately saw their bills go down …