Art Front

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Editor
Categoriesart and artists
Frequencyin theory, monthly
'Art Front'
roughly printed black-and-white page with heavy black text and logos of the ACA and the Artists Union
Cover of the first edition, November 1934
Editor
Categoriesart and artists
Frequencyin theory, monthly
Publisher
Founded1934
First issueNovember 1934
Final issue
Number
December 1937
25 (volume 3, number 8)
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York
LanguageEnglish

Art Front was an American art magazine published by the Artists Union in New York, initially as a joint project with the Artists' Committee of Action. Twenty-five issues appeared between November 1934 and December 1937.[1][2][3]

The Artists' Committee of Action formed early in 1934 to protest the destruction by Nelson Rockefeller of Diego Rivera's mural Man at the Crossroads; Hugo Gellert, Stuart Davis, Zoltan Hecht and Lionel S. Reiss were among the leaders. In the autumn of 1934 Herman Baron, the director of the American Contemporary Art gallery, was asked to join them; he offered to publish a bulletin for the group, similar to those he had previously issued through his gallery. Gellert suggested to the Artists Union that they should collaborate on the project. The name Art Front was proposed by Herbert Kruckman.[3]

The first issue appeared in November 1934. Baron was managing editor, with an editorial committee of sixteen, eight from each of the partner groups. Apart from Gellert, Davis and Hecht, those from the Artists' Committee of Action were Hilda Abel, Harold Baumbach, Abraham Harriton, Rosa Pringle and Jennings Tofel, while those from the Artists Union were Boris Gorelick, Katherine Gridley, Ethel Olenikov, Robert Jonas, Kruckman, Michael Loew, C. Mactarian and Max Spivak.[2] Although initially a joint project of the two groups, the magazine was by no later than April 1935 describing itself as the official publication of the Artists Union; the logo of the Artists' Committee remained on the masthead until January 1935.[4]:77

Stuart Davis replaced Baron as editor at some time before November 1935; he was replaced by Joseph Solman in March 1936, followed by Clarence Weinstock in January 1937.[2] The last issue was published in December of that year.[2]

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