- City:
- Corning, IA
- Site Type:
- Art Works, Murals
- New Deal Agencies:
- Arts Programs, Treasury Section of Fine Arts (TSFA)
- Started:
- 1941
- Completed:
- 1941
- Artist:
- Marion Gilmore
- Quality of Information:
- Very Good
- Site Survival:
- Extant
Description
This egg-tempera-on-gesso mural was painted by Marion Gilmore in 1941.
From When Tillage Begins: The Stone City Art Colony and School: “Gilmore won the WPA commission to produce a mural for the town of Corning, Iowa. The jury, led by former Stone City faculty member Edward Rowan, demanded that Gilmore’s image only contain actual architecture and landmarks in the downtown district. Her mural, ‘Band Concert,’ won the federal-sponsored Forty-Eight States design competition of 1939 and depicts a summer band concert in a small, Iowa community. Upon its completion, Rowan demanded that Gilmore remove two objects (a cannon and an obelisk) from the image; Gilmore made the changes to accommodate the WPA requirement. However, she also made other, minor landscaping changes, portraying the town in a sentimental light. Considered a tremendous success by the local citizens, the mural was installed in 1941. Gilmore continued to exhibit professionally, including the Iowa Art Salon (1938).
Gilmore eventually moved to New York City, married, and after World War II, began using a variation of her married name (“Mion Hulse”) and abandoned the use of her birth name for signed works. It is speculated that due to the then-art community’s reluctance to celebrate talented, female artists, Gilmore adopted a gender-neutral name for her later exhibitions. Among her many honors are several Iowa Art Salon awards and the winning commission for the Corydon, Iowa Post Office, entitled “Volunteer Fire Department” (1942).”
(projects.mtmercy.edu)
Source notes
Originally posted in the New Deal Art Registry: https://www.newdealartregistry.org/
Site originally submitted by The Living New Deal on February 14, 2014.
Additional contributions by Tom Parker.
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I was curious about how a postcard dated March 11, 1918 from Corning, IA would’ve been delivered to the Hermitage Hotel in Nashville, TN. The stamp on the vintage postcard isn’t franked with an airplane stamp. The postcard was found in a thrift shop and sold with other cards in a bundle. The Hermitage Hotel is an opulent building in downtown Nashville.
Thank you,
Nancy Bustle