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DESCRIPTION:The SFSU Labor Archives will have an exhibit on Victor Arnautoff and the 
 Politics of Art starting on September 13, 2017\n\nSFSU September 2017 
 Exhibition "Victor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art"\n\nThe Richmond 
 Museum of History is proud to have rediscovered the historic mural Richmond 
 Industrial City (1941) painted by famed artist Victor Arnautoff. Currently, 
 the Museum is raising funds to restore the painting and display it once 
 again in the City of Richmond for the benefit of the public. \n\nIn the 
 meantime, we're delighted that a full-scale reproduction of the mural will 
 be displayed at the Labor Archives at San Francisco State University as 
 part of the forthcoming exhibitionVictor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art 
 on view September 13 -  December 12, 2017. Learn more about the upcoming 
 exhibit here: https://goo.gl/hEJ5Qq\n\nVictor Arnautoff and the Politics of 
 Art\n\n\nSeptember 13-December 12, 2017\nLabor Archives and Research Center 
 San Francisco State University\nJ. Paul Leonard Library, Special 
 Collections Gallery\n1630 Holloway Ave., 4th Floor, Room LIB 462\nGallery 
 Hours: Monday-Friday, 1-5 pm or by appointment\n\nExhibition Opening & 
 Reception: Wednesday, September 13th, 5-7 pm\nReception: 5-6 pm, J. Paul 
 Leonard Library, Faculty Commons, Room LIB 286\nLecture: Robert Cherny, 
 Professor of History Emeritus, 6-7 pm, Special Collections Gallery, LIB 
 460\n\nVictor Arnautoff (1896-1979) was a leading artist in San Francisco 
 in the 1930s, whose best known work is the mural "City Life" located at 
 Coit Tower. Victor Arnautoff and The Politics of Art looks at Arnautoff's 
 "art for the people" – works executed in an easily reproduced format and 
 accessible to the general public that were intended to move and stimulate 
 thinking. Like his mentor, Diego Rivera (1886-1957), Arnautoff saw art as 
 "a weapon of ideas in the struggle for a new society." This exhibition 
 includes a full scale reproduction of his recently rediscovered New 
 Deal-era mural for the Richmond Post Office and a selection of works on 
 paper spanning his entire career addressing themes of labor and social 
 justice.\n \nThis exhibition and supporting programming was organized by 
 The Labor Archives & Research Center at San Francisco State 
 University\n(415) 405-5571 | larc@sfsu.edu | 
 http://library.sfsu.edu/larc\nhttps://www.facebook.com/pages/Labor-Archives-and-Research-Center-San-Francisco-State-University/106016096086433\nMelinda 
 McCrary, Executive Director\nRichmond Museum of History\n510-235-7387\nPO 
 BOX 1267 Richmond, CA 94802 \n\nVictor Arnautoff: San Francisco's Master 
 Muralist of the 1930’s With Author Robert 
 Cherny\nhttps://youtu.be/p5aYXYqcDNg\n\nVictor Arnautoff: San Francisco's 
 Master Muralist of the 1930's is  the title of a book written by SFSU 
 Professor Robert Cherny. Victor Arnautoff worked as muralist Diego Rivera's 
 assistant in Mexico City and then came back to San Francisco where he 
 worked on important murals and paintings as well as graphics for the 
 longshore workers in 1934. He did some of the murals at Coit Tower where he 
 was artistic director of the project. Between 1931 and 1942, Victor 
 Arnautoff was arguably San Francisco’s leading artist of pubic murals. 
 His murals may still be seen today at the former Palo Alto Health Clinic, 
 Coit Tower, the former Protestant chapel at the Presidio of San Francisco, 
 George Washington High School, the San Francisco Art Institute, and at 
 three post offices including South San Francisco. From his service as a 
 cavalry officer during the Russian Civil War, his politics moved left, 
 joining the Communist Party in 1938. This lecture  surveys Arnautoff’s 
 career, from his birth in Russia in 1896 to his death in the Soviet Union 
 in 1979, focusing on his art and politics during his years in San Francisco 
 from 1931 to 1963.  He also taught painting at the California Labor School 
 and at Stanford. During the 1950's  hounded during the McCarthy period and 
 returned to the Soviet Union where he continued to do his work.\n\nThis 
 presentation by professor Robert Cherny was made  on July 11, 2017 in San 
 Francisco and   was sponsored by SF Musuem  and Historical Society 
 http://sfhistory.org and is a part of  LaborFest.net\n\nProduction of Labor 
 Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/09/04/18802541.php
SUMMARY:Victor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art
LOCATION:Labor Archives and Research Center San Francisco State University\nJ. Paul 
 Leonard Library, Special Collections Gallery\n1630 Holloway Ave., 4th 
 Floor, Room LIB 462\nGallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 1-5 pm or by appointment
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/09/04/18802541.php
DTSTART:20170914T000000Z
DTEND:20170914T020000Z
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