Our site will be undergoing maintenance from 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 20. During this time, Bookshop, checkout, and other features will be unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Cookies must be enabled to use this website.
Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Book details
  • Genre:ART
  • SubGenre:Individual Artists / Monographs
  • Language:English
  • Pages:44
  • Paperback ISBN:9781483573274

Apple Picking, Tobacco Harvesting and General Lee

Arlington's New Deal Murals and Muralist

by Toby McIntosh

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
The intense and spiritual muralist, Auriel Bessemer, painted the seven colorful murals in the Arlington, Va., Post Office. Dramatizing scenes from local history, the murals were commissioned as part of a New Deal relief program to help artists. Apple Picking, Tobacco Harvesting and General Lee tells the story of the murals, the scenes and the unusual artist.
Description
My favorite mural in the Arlington, Virginia, Central Post Office shows seven young men and women picking apples on an outing in the country The apple-pickers mural is one of seven that decorate the post office near my house, commissioned by the federal government during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Installed in 1940, the seven colorful murals depict diverse scenes from local history with verve, and a few inaccuracies. Picnickers frolic at Great Falls. Army polo players compete at Fort Myer. American Indians roast deer on Roosevelt Island. John Smith meets the Massowomeck. Enslaved persons harvest tobacco. Robert E. Lee receives his commission to lead Virginia’s armies. The muralist, Auriel Bessemer, was an intense, energetic and spiritual man who earned his living by teaching art lessons, running a small art gallery on Dupont Circle and doing commissioned portraits and murals. A stylized romanticism characterizes his art. His portraits won praise for their sensitivity, but the imagined figures in his murals seem repetitively similar, a bit stiff, with chiseled bodies and classic noses. His bold, carefully organized mural layouts are based on his fascination with classical proportions. Bessemer painted dozens of murals, for railroad cars, restaurants, churches, union halls and corporate offices. Most have disappeared, but two murals survive in post offices in South Carolina and Mississippi. Doing commissioned secular murals, Bessemer lamented, was an unfortunate necessity. He much preferred to be inspired by his strongly held political and spiritual beliefs. Passionately antifascist, Bessemer obsessed for years on a never-realized design for a large mural filled with several hundred figures and dramatically titled The Destruction, Regeneration, and Redemption of Man. He published a polemical poem called “The Slaughter-House of Man” condemning the rise of fascism in Europe. When World War II came Bessemer worked for the Army using his design skills. An unusual family background helps explain his spiritual beliefs. He was raised in an eccentric religious commune in Florida, taught that we live on the inside surface of a gold-wrapped hollow globe. His eclectic spiritual education continued during heady early years as an apprentice muralist and art student in New York City in the 1920s. Late in his life, Bessemer moved to Colorado to join a New Age religious group. He illustrated the books of its charismatic leaders, who preached wisdom transmitted through them from “past masters” and believed in reincarnation. Surprisingly, I was fortunate to locate and interview a few people who had known Bessemer, who was born in 1909 and died in 1986. One of his old friends asked me, “Do you know about Bessemer’s past lives?” I still don’t. But here’s the story of the artist and the first public art in Arlington.
About the author
Toby McIntosh is a journalist living in Arlington, Va. Retired after four decades of covering Congress, the White House and regulatory agencies, he now runs a website on international transparency policy, FreedomInfo.org. The New Deal has been a longstanding interest; witness a near-complete set of the WPA state travel guides.