The final example of original New Yorker cover art by Constantin Alajálov in the collection of the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts is a superb illustration of a Broadway theatre lobby at intermission. Dress, of course, is far less formal today, but the experience of attending a Broadway production is still totally recognizable from this 1940 illustration.
Constantin Alajálov, The Theatre Lobby, Collection of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute |
The Theatre Lobby Museum Description, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute |
Note: You can read more on the New Yorker work of Constantin Alajálov here. If you have artwork of your own you'd like to share, this is the place.
Additional examples of original New Yorker cover art may be seen here. There are now nearly thirty posts on the subject, which is one of my favorites.
My posts about Broadway are collected here.
Additional examples of original New Yorker cover art may be seen here. There are now nearly thirty posts on the subject, which is one of my favorites.
My posts about Broadway are collected here.
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