Artwork Details
- Title
- Finishing the Cathedral of Learning
- Artist
- Date
- 1934
- Location
- Dimensions
- 40 1⁄4 x 30 1⁄4 in. (102.3 x 76.9 cm.)
- Credit Line
- Transfer from the U.S. Department of Labor
- Mediums
- Mediums Description
- oil on canvas
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Cityscape — season — winter
- Allegory — arts and sciences — education
- New Deal — Public Works of Art Project — Pennsylvania
- Architecture — vehicle — truck
- Occupation — industry — construction
- Figure group
- Object Number
- 1964.1.42
Artwork Description
Artist Harry Scheuch painted the Cathedral of Learning twice for the PWAP. The first image is a close-up view of the masons at work(1964.1.157), while this second painting (1964.1.42) is a more distant view that reveals the horde of workers involved. Together the two paintings tell the story of this mighty undertaking. The forty-two-story structure was not substantially completed until 1937, and some interior work continued for decades after that. Like the Empire State Building and the Golden Gate Bridge, the Cathedral of Learning demonstrated that the Great Depression could not stop Americans from accomplishing great things.
1934: A New Deal for Artists exhibition label
Harry W. Scheuch painted this image in 1934, three years before the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh was finished. The cathedral was built to solve the university's problems with overcrowding and to "convey a mood of power" to both students and residents of the city (Brown, The Cathedral of Learning, Exhibition Catalogue, 1987). The workers scurry around the base like ants, carrying equipment back and forth to the giant structure, which is the second tallest educational building in the world after Russia's Moscow State University. The project struggled for money during the Depression, and hundreds of schoolchildren contributed dimes to "buy a brick" and help complete the work. Here, Scheuch emphasized the dramatic scale of the cathedral against the tiny workers to show what can be achieved when people work together.