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Public Domain

Nan Lurie and WPA/Federal Art Project, New York City

Technological Improvements

1936

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Technological Improvements

1936

Physical Qualities Crayon lithograph with scraping, Sheet: 582 x 403 mm. (22 15/16 x 15 7/8 in.) Image: 457 x 301 mm. (18 x 11 7/8 in.)
Credit Line The United States General Services Administration, formerly Federal Works Agency, Works Progress Administration, on extended loan to the Baltimore Museum of Art.
Object Number L.1943.9.206
Here, Nan Lurie and Ida Y. Abelman each produced complex, nightmarish scenes conveying the oppression and anxieties of the American industrial laborer. Workers in Technological Improvements stand outside a factory door with a “No Help Wanted” sign while powerful machinery disposes of them and their tools. Concerns over emerging technologies still resonate today in debates around artificial intelligence, productivity, and the perceived obsolescence of human workers. In Abelman’s print, steamships transporting goods and immigrant families cross stormy seas. A giant sewing machine weighs down on garment industry sweatshop workers while ghostly headlines call for much-needed reforms in child labor, voting rights, and unionization. At bottom right, a uniform series of white-collar bosses look away.
Cindy Medley Buckner, Art in a Day's Work: Prints from the WPA. Baltimore Museum of Art, 11 June-24 September 2000, fig. 4, p. 5.

Virginia Anderson and Robin Owen Joyce, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "Art/Work: Women Printmakers of the WPA," November 5, 2023 - June 30, 2024.

Inscribed: RECTO: LL margin (pencil): 'Technological Improvements'; LC margin (stamped in black ink): 'FEDERAL ART PROJECT / NYC WPA'; LR margin (pencil): 'Nan Lurie'; BR Corner (pencil): '9'. VERSO: LR (pencil): '#1696 - gr. I'; C: BMA stamp.

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