WPA post office
mural has monetary and historical value Out of public view for almost 30 years, artwork now being
restored for display Herrel Hallmark,
Press-Reporter, Wednesday, Sept.
16, 2015 11:58 AM
A piece of artwork that has historical
significance, as well as possible significant monetary value, has been hidden
away from public view for almost 30 years in a vacant building near downtown
Lamesa.
It may
have been destined not only to have been forgotten but most probably it would
have been a casualty of demolition as the building is not slated for
renovation.
But, thanks to the local efforts of Randy
Leonard and others, as well as a grant from the Weaver Foundation, that artwork
soon will be restored and relocated in another public building where it can be
seen and admired by the public.
ÒThe Horse BreakersÓ is an oil-on-canvas
mural that was painted by artist Fletcher Martin in 1939. During that time,
Martin – who reportedly was a self-taught artist – was a visiting
teacher in art schools in California. He died in 1979 at the age of 75 in New
York City.
In 1938 Martin was awarded a commission by
the federal agency called the Treasury Section of Painting and Sculpture to
paint the mural for placement in the new U.S. Post Office building, which
officially was opened and dedicated in March of 1939, in Lamesa.
That federal agency was established as
part of the New Deal work programs – often referred to in general as the
WPA (Works Progress Administration), during The Great Depression era and under
the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, to provide work for
qualified artists and decoration for new federal buildings all over the nation.
Sixty-one out of the approximately 1,000 murals – all painted by
various artists who were selected for commissions as the result of anonymous
competitions – and installed in Post Offices and federal courthouses
throughout the United States were placed in Texas.
REMOVING THE MURAL: Scott M. Haskins,
Conservator of Fine Art, who is owner of FACL (Fine Art Conservation Laboratories), Inc. in Santa
Barbara, Calif., is shown (in the photo) working last week to carefully remove
the oil-on-canvas mural that was glued to the wall. Mr. Haskins is a highly renown mural expert,
nationally. The restored mural is planned for placement in the newly
constructed Community Center in Lamesa. (Herrel Hallmark/Press-Reporter)