Citizen Artist Exhibition
Event Details
- Date
- Saturday, April 11
- Time
- 10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Upcoming Event Dates Show Hide
Apr 11, 2026 Apr 12, 2026 Apr 15, 2026 Apr 16, 2026 Apr 17, 2026 Apr 18, 2026 Apr 19, 2026 Apr 22, 2026 Apr 23, 2026 Apr 24, 2026 Apr 25, 2026 Apr 26, 2026 Apr 29, 2026 Apr 30, 2026 May 01, 2026 May 02, 2026 May 03, 2026 May 06, 2026 May 07, 2026 May 08, 2026 May 09, 2026 May 10, 2026 May 13, 2026 May 14, 2026 May 15, 2026 May 16, 2026 May 17, 2026 May 20, 2026 May 21, 2026 May 22, 2026 May 23, 2026 May 24, 2026 May 27, 2026 May 28, 2026 May 29, 2026 May 30, 2026 May 31, 2026 Jun 03, 2026 Jun 04, 2026 Jun 05, 2026 Jun 06, 2026 Jun 07, 2026 Jun 10, 2026 Jun 11, 2026 Jun 12, 2026 Jun 13, 2026 Jun 14, 2026 Jun 17, 2026 Jun 18, 2026 Jun 19, 2026 Jun 20, 2026 Jun 21, 2026 Jun 24, 2026 Jun 25, 2026 Jun 26, 2026 Jun 27, 2026 Jun 28, 2026 Jul 01, 2026 Jul 02, 2026 Jul 03, 2026 Jul 04, 2026 Jul 05, 2026 Jul 08, 2026 Jul 09, 2026 Jul 10, 2026 Jul 11, 2026 Jul 12, 2026 Jul 15, 2026 Jul 16, 2026 Jul 17, 2026 Jul 18, 2026 Jul 19, 2026
- Location
-
Delaware Art Museum
2301 Kentmere Parkway,
Wilmington, DE 19806 - Event Type
- Wilmington250
Description
Coinciding with the Semiquincentennial in 2026,ย Citizen Artistย will meet a moment of national reflection with a celebration of artist workers in America. Beginning in 1933, artists painted, photographed, wrote, acted, and taught for New Deal programs including the Public Works of Art Project, the Works Progress Administration, Farm Security Administration, and the Treasury Section on Fine Arts. President Franklin D. Rooseveltโs New Deal initiated dedicated arts and cultural support at the national level. Four decades later, the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) funded unemployment relief and jobs training programs through local Department of Labor offices. Across the United States, artists and their allies adapted, designing programs that mobilized the skills of out-of-work professional artists in service of their local communities.
CETA wasnโt designed to support artists โ it was designed to create jobs. Yet in the 1970s, the Department of Labor did both. With CETA support, the creative sector saw professionalization of the field, the founding of new arts organizations, and an expansion of community-based arts programs. Artists used CETA to fund community connections, and in Delaware, it ignited energy that helped shape programs at the Delaware Art Museum and develop the foundation for The Delaware Contemporary. By reactivating CETAโs legacy of creative ingenuity, we thread the lines of creativity, innovation, and collaboration across generations.ย Citizen Artistย brings artworks from the interconnected eras of the New Deal and CETA together, alongside original commissions that document, amplify and imagine new possibilities for artistsโ roles today.



