Communist Party and the Arts

Artists of many kinds were drawn to the Communist Party, especially in the 1930s and 1940s. Early in the depression-decade, Party-sponsored John Reed Clubs brought together writers, artists, and intellectuals in key cities where the CP had strength. A Seattle-Portland club operated for a short time, Other than the fact that it published the newsletter Prolecult, not much is known about its activities or membership. The Reed Clubs devoted themselves to encouraging and producing proletarian art, art that would be educational and instrumental, furthering the cause of revolution.

After 1935, as the Party turned to popular front alliances and sought to build support through CIO unions and mass organizations like the Washington Commonwealth Federation, the discipline expected of artists loosened and many more writers, actors, painters, scultors, and musicians were willing to work with Communists. 1935 also saw the expansion of federal funding for the arts as the New Deal administration launched the Federal Writers Project, Federal Arts Project, and Federal Theatre Project under the auspices of the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Earlier some painters in Washington State had found commissions creating murals in post offices and other public buildings, now they would be joined by other artists, actors, and writers, quite a number of whom were political radicals, some Party members.

Among the radical artists who made lasting contributions to the cultural legacy of Washington state were Richard Correll, William Cumming, Ronald Ginter, and Pablo O'Higgins, and the theater team of Florence and Burton James, several of whom were not members of the Communist Party. Their work is profiled on these pages. In addition we have detailed reports on the federal arts and theatre programs that introduced public funding for the arts and transformed the visual and theatrical landscape of Washington State.

Richard V. Correll and the Woodcut Graphics of the Voice of Action, by Brian Grijalva

The Voice of Action published weekly from 1933-1936. Officially affiliated with the unemployed movement, it was linked, unofficially, with the Communist Party. Unable to reproduce photographs, the weekly relied on woodcuts for illustrations, especially the stark and powerful images produced by young Richard Correll. Correll's images for VOA helped him gain recognition. He worked for a time with Federal Arts Project then moved to New York where he became known for book illustrations and dramatic linoleum cut prints. A radical artist (but not a Party member) throughout his life, his posters and prints fueled union, civil rights, antiwar, and environmental causes until his death in 1990. This article introduces Correll's work for the Voice of Action and reproduces more than thirty woodcuts by Correll and other artists from the Communist sponsored newspaper.

A self-taught artist, Ray Ginther made a living at various kinds of laboring work and also as a cook. When the economy collapsed, "Ray worked when he could and bummed around when he couldn't, " his son recalled. He spent time in the Hoovervilles, hobo jungles, and jails that became the subject of so many of his paintings. He was active in radical politics, including the Unemployed Council movement led by the Communist Party. Ginther produced more than 80 paintings that are now owned by the Washington State Historical Society. They are a unique resource, depicting the rough life of Hoovervilles and homeless men, of jails and soup kitchens, unemployed demonstrations and police attacks, strikes and radical protests.

The Jameses founded the Seattle Repertory Playhouse and played a crucial role in the development of the Federal Theatre Project in the state, as well as reimagining the role of theatre in Washington. Among the James important projects was leading the Negro Repertory Company. Outside of New York City, Washington's FTP hosted the only all-African American company in the nation, who produced three plays: Stevedore, about a longshore strike; an all-black production of Lysistrata, which was closed down for its "scandalous" scenes; and a production written by the Negro Unit based on the life of poet Paul Laurence Dunbar.

Here are two reports: The Jameses and theSeattle Repertory Playhouse

Seattle's Negro Repertory Company:

The Power of Art and the Fear of Labor: Seattle's Production of Waiting for Lefty in 1936, by Selena Voelker

Waiting For Lefty, written by Clifford Odets about a 1934 taxi union strike, was labeled as Communist propaganda by critics. Odets’ play had gone through several successful runs, most notably in New York, before it came to Seattle in 1936. The Seattle Repertory Playhouse (SRP) decided to produce it after a private reading of the play at the home of directors Florence and Burton James, attended by University of Washington colleagues and friends. The decision to stage the play caused a sensational backlash that resulted in a showing of only one night in Seattle, and resulted in the blacklisting of the SRP by one of the city’s major papers, the Seattle Times.

Other reports on radical artists and arts programs.