Ida York Abelman (1910–2002) was an American artist and muralist in the 1930s. Abelman was known as a Social Realist.[1] She was born Ida York and lived her early life in New York City. At the age of 19 she married Larry Abelman, also an artist.
Abelman was known for her graphic work that she produced during the Depression. She was heavily influenced by Constructivism, Surrealism, and Social realism.[4] Her works often portrays a machine aesthetic by combining machine parts with human or organic forms to convey the positive and negative aspects of a mechanized society.[4][5][6][7]
Abelman silhouetted her compositions against the full sheet of paper, imparting an abstracted strength to the lithographs that is a hallmark of her personal style.[3]
Abelman was part of the staff of the Graphic Arts Division of the Federal Art Project in New York City from 1936 through 1939. Her artistic point of view and printmaking style made her work particularly suitable to the Project; images of industrial workers and elements of machinery were common parts of her iconography.[10] Two of her prints for the Federal Art Project that illustrate this style are Man and Machine, c. 1939, and Construction, 1939.
^Carlisle, John C., "A Simple and Vital Design: The Story of the Indiana Post Office Murals", Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis, 1995 pp 20–21
^Mavicliano, George H., and Richard A. Lawson, The Federal Art Project in Illinois: 1935–1943 , Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale 1990, p167
^Carlisle, John C., "A Simple and Vital Design: The Story of the Indiana Post Office Murals", Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis, 1995
^Carlton-Smith, Kimn (1990). A New Deal for Women: Women Artists and the Federal Art Project, 1935-1939. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers The State University of New Jersey.