Original Watercolor Study of Goodwin's Department Store, Brooklyn NY
- [New York]: n.p., 1960
[New York]: n.p., 1960. Original watercolor study, possibly for a potential mural, from noted social realist, WPA painter, and muralist Edward Laning (1906-1981). The painting features a Goodwin's Department Store display being arranged by a window dresser, with hurried interracial city crowds passing in the foreground. The smiling mannequins in the window are contrasted with seriousness of the window dresser and the everday worry of the passersby - the promise of commerce vs. the reality of life for the working class. Goodwin's was an infamous anti-union establishment and was also hostile to the poor and working class, notoriously eschewing both layaway and credit programs - a natural subject for Laning who was occupied with such themes for the entirety of his career. Laning's work is at the Whitney, Smithsonian, Met, and perhaps most famously at the NYPL, where his large mural in the McGraw Rotunda remains one of his masterpieces. Original watercolor on paper, 15" x 20" approx. Executed in a brown and grey palette with pencil. Old matting tape to verso. Penciled framer's notations to bottom edge. Else clean and sound. Very good or better. Signed "Laning" to lower right corner.
Details
Title
Original Watercolor Study of Goodwin's Department Store, Brooklyn NY
Author
LANING, Edward
Condition
Unknown
Publisher
n.p.: [New York]
Date
1960