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Lily Furedi : ウィキペディア英語版
Lily Furedi

Lily Furedi (May 20, 1896 – November 1969) was an American artist. A native of Budapest, she achieved national recognition for her 1934 painting, ''The Subway'', which is a sympathetic portrayal of passengers in a New York subway car. Light-hearted in tone, the painting depicts a cross-section of city dwellers from the viewpoint of a fellow commuter.〔〔〔〔
==Artistic career==

When Lili Furedi was 31 years old she debarked on the ship ''Cellina'' at the port of Los Angeles. She came from Budapest by way of Trieste and on the ship's manifest she reported her occupation as painter. There is no information about her life before the passenger arrival list of December 4, 1927 which records these facts.〔〔 There is also no record of art training she may have received after her arrival in the United States.〔 There is no doubt she was working as a professional artist, however, because in 1931 she won a prize for her painting, ''The Village'', at the annual Christmas show held by the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors at the Argent Gallery in January of that year.〔 In 1932 and for much of the rest of the decade she placed paintings in group exhibitions, including: (1) a 1932 exhibition by Hungarian-American artists in which she showed works called ''Hungarian Village'' and ''Hungarian Farm'',〔 (2) a 1935 exhibition of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors in which she showed a painting called ''Interior'',〔 (3) a 1936 exhibition by the New York Municipal Art Committee,〔 and (4) a 1937 exhibition at the Woman's Club of Glen Ridge, New Jersey.〔
Reviewing the 43rd annual Women Painters and Sculptors show of 1934, Edward Alden Jewell of the ''New York Times'' called attention to a painting of Furedi's entitled ''The Interesting Book'' which he included with paintings by three other artists as "unhappily deliberate attempts to be 'modern' at all costs."〔〔 In contrast, the ''New York Sun'' chose another of Furedi's paintings, called ''After the Masquerade'', as the sole illustration accompanying its review of the exhibition.〔 In reviewing another exhibition held in 1934, the critic, C.H. Bonte, listed Furedi within a group of artists considered to be among the "best known" of American women "who have gained high recognition" for their work.〔
During 1935 Furedi was accepted into the Public Works of Art Project. This pioneering federal program employed artists at craftsmen's wages to make pictures on the theme of "the American scene."〔 Her contribution to the project was the painting called ''The Subway''. The picture was one of twenty-five selected for presentation as gifts to the White House. It was also in a group that President and Mrs. Roosevelt had themselves selected as being among the best in the show.〔 Beginning in 1935, when it accompanied a book review in the ''New York Times'',〔 this the painting has frequently been used as an illustration in books, articles, news accounts, and Internet web sites.
In examining Furedi's ''The Subway'', critics and other observers have found much to say. The painting was said to be cheerful and the artist's interest to be sympathetic.〔 It was seen as vibrant, bright, and optimistic.〔〔 Its scene was said to be playful, clean, and decorous〔〔 and its design elements as idealistically deployed.〔 One reviewer saw an influence of "Cézanne's cubes and cones" in a scene which tells a compelling story of a projected "society in which sex and race are comfortably, if nervously, aligned"〔 and a poet, using the ekphrastic poetic technique, declared that the painting showed the "best in mass transit," in which "we get to meet, greet, / and saunter through / time and space together." The poem, by Angie Trudell Vasquez, is called "Eyes Alive." It closes:
"see what beauty / we can make / when all is lit up with color / warm and welcoming, / beckoning you / into the picture, / offering you a seat."〔
Following the 1934 touring show in which it appeared, ''The Subway'' was not again included in a public exhibition until 1983 when it appeared in "Social Concern and Urban Realism: American Painting of the 1930s" at Gallery 1199 in New York's Martin Luther King Labor Center.〔 It appeared again in "1934: A New Deal for Artists," a touring exhibition put together by the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 2009.〔〔〔〔
After the Public Works of Art Project was closed down in 1934 Furedi joined the Federal Art Project. She is recorded as being employed in this program in 1937–1939〔 and, specifically as a muralist, in 1940.〔
Furedi's work was reviewed infrequently after the mid-1930s. In 1941 she painted an altar mural called ''The Galley Slave'' which she donated to a Hungarian church in New York.〔 In 1950 Furedi showed a decorated piece of pottery in a group exhibition at the Greenwich House Pottery in New York.〔 She died in New York at the age of 73 in November 1969.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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