Rural Pennsylvania, Katherine Milhous |
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Katherine Milhous (1894-1977) was a newspaper illustrator and book designer of Pennsylvania Dutch heritage. She was an artist for the Federal Art Program in Pennsylvania during the Depression and produced a colorful series of posters representing rural Pennsylvania. She attended the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. She was author/illustrator of "The Egg Tree," a 1951 Caldecott Medal book, "Lovina: A story of the Pennsylvania Country, Snow Over Bethlehem" and other stories. She illustrated "The Silver Pencil" by Alice Dalgliesh, a 1945 Newbery honor book, and won the 1967 Drexel Award, among other honors. The "By the People, For the People: Posters from the WPA, 1936-1943" collection of the Library of Congress, consists of 908 boldly colored and graphically diverse original posters produced from 1936 to 1943 as part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal. Of the 2,000 WPA posters known to exist, the Library of Congress's collection of more than 900 is the largest. These striking silkscreen, lithograph, and woodcut posters were designed to publicize a wide variety of public programs from art to safety. Seventeen states were involved as well as the District of Columbia. The posters were made possible by one of the first U.S. Government programs to support the arts and were added to the Library's holdings in the 1940s. Medium : 1 print (poster) : lithograph, color Created/Published : Pennsylvania Art Project, WPA between 1936 and 1940 Creator : Katherine Milhous, artist, 1894-1977 Part of the Works Progress Administration Collection housed in the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress Availability: Usually ships in 1 week. Product #: cph3b51486 |
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