Swing Time: Reginald Marsh And Thirties New York is the first major assessment of the work of 'American Scene' artist Reginald Marsh (1898-1954) in over 30 years. Focusing on 60 paintings, drawings, prints, photographs and sketches, drawn from public and private collections across the U.S., it puts Marsh's exuberant depictions of urban daily life within the context of 1930s America and the work of fellow artists such as Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Walt Kuhn, Guy Pene du Bois, Walker Evans and Arthur Rothstein. This striking volume looks at Marsh's fascination with New York street life around his 14th Street studio; the burlesque shows of Lower East Side and the Bowery, advertising hoardings and store displays, and the funfairs of Coney Island. He recorded these in numerous pencil sketches and photographs which formed the basis of his paintings and prints. Together, they tell a complex and contrasting visual story of New York City in this tumultuous time of social tension and economic uncertainty. Contents: President's Foreword Curator's Preface Swing Time: Reginald Marsh and the Exuberant Chaos of Modern Life Barbara Haskell Keeping the Carnival in Town: Reginald Marsh and the Culture of the 1930s Jackson Lears The Urban Spectacle of Reginald Marsh Morris Dickstein "Go Out into the Street, Stare at the People": Reginald Marsh and Surveillance Styles in Interwar American Art Erika Doss Camera-Crazed: Reginald Marsh's Photographs Sasha Nicholas Marsh's Techniques: The Craft of Painting and the Secrets of the Old Masters in Modern Times Lance Mayer and Gay Myers Plates Bibliography Index ILLUSTRATIONS: 80 colour e35 b/w *