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The New Deal in the New West: On the Road with Arthur Rothstein in Nevada |
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This exhibition combines Rothsteins photographs with objects from the Museum s extensive historical collection.
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LAS VEGAS, NEV.- The Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas, located on the campus of the Las Vegas Springs Preserve at 309 S. Valley View Blvd., has announced their newest exhibit, The New Deal in the New West: On the Road with Arthur Rothstein in Nevada. The exhibit opens on September 27 and remains open until March 23, 2026.
Working with The Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Department, the Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas curated 35 images of Las Vegas and the surrounding area from the 1940 iconic publication, Nevada: A Guide to the Silver State. This publication was a culmination of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) project under President Franklin D. Roosevelts New Deal Federal Writers Project.
In the spring of 1940, Government photographer Arthur Rothstein photographed Nevada on assignment for the Federal Farm Security Administration and provided almost one third of the images in the heavily illustrated Nevada guidebook. This exhibition combines Rothsteins photographs with objects from the Museum s extensive historical collection to offer a window into this pivotal year in Nevadas history.
In addition to the prints and artifacts, personal belongings on loan from The Arthur Rothstein Legacy Project foundation such as clothing, tripods, cameras, flashes, traveling trunk, and even a Coleman-type camp stove will be displayed in special exhibition casework.
The inclusion of his personal belongings illustrates Mr. Rothsteins assignments as real adventures in the days before the interstate highway system was built, said Curator Josef Diaz. Additionally, they put a time stamp on the exhibit that helps orient the viewer in time, he added.
Historically speaking, the year 1940 was a time of transition for Nevada. At this time, mining towns were shrinking and a new culture with the introduction of legalized gaming was emerging. President Roosevelt had invested heavily in Nevada during the Great Depression. His New Deal programs employed thousands of Nevada residents to build roads, parks, utilities, and public buildings. These new public works helped support a growing economy centered on recreation, tourism, and stewardship of the States vast natural resources.
Under the WPA, the New Deal Federal Writers Project had hired unemployed writers, editors, and historians to craft a series of state guidebooks. The Nevada Historical Society coordinated the production of Nevada: A Guide to the Silver State, published in 1940. The state guidebooks supported FDRs Proclamation that 1940 would be Travel America Year.
The City of Las Vegas Centennial Commission is a contributing sponsor of this exhibit, funded by sales of the Las Vegas License Plate.
New York City native and photographer Arthur Rothstein produced documentary photographs that endure as iconic images of the 20th century. During the 1930s, he created an indelible visual record of America on assignment for the U.S. Farm Security Administration. His photo essays documented the plight of industrial workers displaced by the Great Depression, farmers ruined by drought, Dust Bowl migrants, and President Roosevelts New Deal government programs designed to assist them.
In 1943, Rothstein enlisted in the war, he became chief photographer in China for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), charged with documenting the organizations relief and assistance to people displaced by war and famine. In April of 1946, on assignment for UNRRA, he recorded an intimate photographic portrait of the stranded community of European Jews who had escaped Nazi oppression by fleeing to Japanese occupied Shanghai.
Over the next forty years, Rothstein was an influential and award-winning photojournalist. In the post-war years, when picture magazines embodied the cultural transformation and turmoil of the baby-boom generation, he served as director of photography for Look and Parade two of the largest-circulation publications in America.
He authored nine books and countless articles on photography, taught photojournalism and mentored many young photographers. His photographs are now in the permanent collections of major museums throughout the world.
Arthur Rothsteins parents and grandparents found refuge and freedom in America escaping the anti-Semitic pogroms of eastern Europe. This family history was an inspiration for his career as a social documentary photographer, writer, photojournalist and teacher.
Rothstein had a lifelong dedication to promoting photography as a means of enriching American culture and focusing attention on important social issues. His sensitive images of people and communities displaced by forces beyond their control created a permanent record; a timeless reminder that new generations must never forget the plight of the dispossessed.
Mr. Rothsteins daughter Annie Segan and husband Brodie Hefner run The Arthur Rothstein Legacy Project foundation. She is giving a talk on her fathers work and legacy on Saturday September 27, at 2:00 p.m. The talk is free with admission.
A special preview event is planned for September 26, 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. at the museum. Friends of the NSMLV will host the opening party for members of the museum. To become a member, visit the museums website, lasvegasnvmuseum.org, for the online form to complete. Memberships start at $25.
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