Three Girls Playing Double Dutch, Hartford ; Thursday is a Work of Art

Slide depicting three African-American girls playing Double Dutch (jump rope) by the Gold Building (755 Main Street) in Hartford. Taken during a Thursday is a Work of Art event. ; Gift ; Accessioned object ; Gift of Robert Gregson ; Thursday is a Work of Art was a public art program in downtown Hartford that took place for eight weeks in the summer of 1977 and 13 weeks in the summer of 1978. Every Thursday, people who lived, worked, shopped, and socialized in the city were confronted with public performance art that changed each week. The art was sometimes political, often controversial and co... Mehr ...

Dokumenttyp: Graphics
Erscheinungsdatum: 1978
Schlagwörter: Hartford (Conn.) / African American children / African Americans / Slides / African American girls / Color Transparencies / DUAP Pilot / Thursday is a Work of Art (Hartford / Conn.) / United States. Comprehensive Employment and Training Act / Performance art / Double dutch (Rope skipping) / People of color
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29393831
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/11134/40002:TMS_35526

Slide depicting three African-American girls playing Double Dutch (jump rope) by the Gold Building (755 Main Street) in Hartford. Taken during a Thursday is a Work of Art event. ; Gift ; Accessioned object ; Gift of Robert Gregson ; Thursday is a Work of Art was a public art program in downtown Hartford that took place for eight weeks in the summer of 1977 and 13 weeks in the summer of 1978. Every Thursday, people who lived, worked, shopped, and socialized in the city were confronted with public performance art that changed each week. The art was sometimes political, often controversial and confrontational, and was meant to inject some life into the city center. It was created by Sidewalk, Inc., an offshoot of the Knox Foundation (a Hartford-based non-profit), and was funded by Knox, the federal Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), and local corporations, including United Technologies. CETA was a federal law that provided money to train unemployed people for public service jobs, and in 1977 and 1978, the state of Connecticut received $3 million from CETA to employ people in the arts. For two summers, Sidewalk, Inc. relied on CETA funding to bring its irreverent “art attacks” to people in Hartford, challenging them to interact with the city in unusual ways. The program was both loved and hated – the Hartford Courant covered it extensively, seemingly delighted by how silly and interactive it was, and simultaneously published letters to the editor in which people decried it for being trivial and making a mockery of one of its sponsors, United Technologies. In 1979, the CETA money had all but dried up, and United Technologies declined to renew its support of Thursday is a Work of Art. ; N