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Harry Gottlieb received his training at the Minneapolis
School of Art, specializing in design. He began his career in New
York as a wallpaper designer. After a few months he became a stage
manager and scene designer in Provincetown. He then settled in Woodstock,
New York and began painting. He was on the Federal Art Project both
in Woodstock and in New York City. In 1931 he received the Guggenheim
Fellowship and spent the next year traveling abroad. His work is
in the Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Modern Art as well
as several other smaller museums and university collections. In
addition he was the first director of The American Artists School
(1936-7) and president of the Artist’s Union, an organization that
lobbied for federal support for artists.
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Issues:
June-July
1940
October-November
1941
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