She was a founding member of the Sculptors Guild and showed a work, My Children are Desolate Because the Enemy Prevailed in the Second Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition[7]Negro Head in the 1940-1941[8] and Woman in Thought in 1941.[9]
Harkavy was a founding member of the New York Society of Women Artists. Politically she was known as a leftist and anti-fascist with a strong social consciousness. In 1931 she exhibited a bust of Hall Johnson in the Museum of Western Art in Moscow and the work was purchased for the Pushkin Museum there.[10] In 1932 she represented the John Reed Club at an anti-war conference in Amsterdam.[3]
A bust of Italian-American anti-fascist (and her lover[3]) Carlo Tresca who was assassinated in New York in 1943 was installed in his birthplace of Sulmona, Italy.[10]
^Opitz, Glenn B, Editor, Mantle Fielding's Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers, Apollo Book, Poughkeepsie NY, 1986
^ abPark, Marlene and Gerald E. Markowitz, Democratic Vistas: Post Offices and Public Art in the New Deal, Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1984, p. 214
^Sculptors Guild Second Outdoor Exhibition: 1939, The Sculptors' Guild, New York, 1939, p. 50
^Sculptors' Guild Travelling Exhibition: 1940-194, The Sculptors' Guild, New York, 1940, p. 26
^Sculptors Guild Third Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition: 1941, The Sculptors' Guild, New York, 1941, p. 25
^ abRubenstein, Charlotte Streifer, American Women Sculptors, G.K. Hall & Co., Boston, 1990, pp. 266–267
^"Minna Harkavy". Whitney Museum of American Art. Retrieved 29 October 2022.