• Source: Nan Lurie
    • Nan Lurie (1906–1985) was an American printmaker and engraver (born in Odessa) known for 1930s works about racism and about the daily life of African Americans.
      She studied with Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League. She married Kenneth Fearing on June 18, 1945.
      She was a member of the Federal Art Project in New York City from 1935 to 1942.
      Her work is held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum.


      Works


      Despair lithograph, n.d.
      Old Tales lithograph, n.d.
      Sand Yard lithograph, n.d.
      Sandyard lithograph, n.d.
      Speaker lithograph, n.d.
      Subway Bootblack lithograph, 1935-1943
      Subway Scene lithograph, n.d.
      Sunday Afternoon lithograph, n.d.
      Women's House of Detention print, 1936-1939
      Technological Improvements, print, 1936-1939
      Next, lithograph, 1936-1939


      References




      External links


      Nan Lurie, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
      Nan Lurie works for sale
      Nan Lurie, Art Institute of Chicago
      Nan Lurie (American, 1910), artnet
      Nan Lurie, Smithsonian American Art Museum

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