Marsh is often referred to as painting in the genre of “social realism” Marsh tried to capture scenes across social classes and boundaries, promoting the need for social change.
Marsh’s social conscious stance towards art making was particularly important as he worked through the Great Depression. The streets of New York were filled with people living in absolute poverty, as well as workers and performers trying to get by on very little. Marsh sometimes painted the bourgeois and lower class together in the same composition to show the gap between people living in the same city.
Marsh also frequented Coney Island, a well-known beach and amusement park in Brooklyn, New York. Marsh loved painting the crowds of sunbathers and circus-like performers that flocked there during hot summers.
Marsh’s work is now in major museums and collections across the United States. Marsh is an important Depression-era, American artist. Do you think you own a painting by Reginald Marsh? Contact us. We are the experts on Reginald Marsh. |