This section brings us back over half a century, to a period in American
history when collaboration between artists and organizing seemed an obvious
choice to many, and when art classes for workers were flourishing.
The1940s were a time of cultural ferment, during and directly after WWII,
and a time when the cultural lives of union members often included picnics
with their families, playing base ball with their colleagues, attending
dances, singing with choruses, attending plays and going on boat rides.
Artists worked with and for unions; unions instigated art classes for
members and their children; composers wrote songs about work, and
playwrights created dramas and musicals about workers.
During this period an extraordinary, though brief, collaboration was forged
between the Metropolitan Museum of Art and representatives of the ILGWU and
the NMU. This exhibit features a few tantalizing images from that time.
ILGWU members leave union headquarters for a trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. They carry an ILGWU Educational Department banner and a poster for the Labor Drama Festival. March 30, 1935

ILGWU Archives (#5780pb10f2c), International News Photo, Kheel Center, Cornell University.
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