Family Of Cats
Millard Sheets fine art print lithograph print by American artist
Millard Sheets titled Family Flats. Created around 1934 or 1935, the work is a depiction of the bustling, crowded life in the Depression-era tenement housing of the Bunker Hill neighborhood in downtown Los Angeles.
Artwork Details
Artist: Millard Sheets (American, 1907–1989)
Title: Family Flats
Medium: Lithograph in black on paper
Date: Circa 1934-1935
Subject: The artwork portrays a dense urban scene featuring multi-story apartments, external staircases, and numerous figures engaged in daily activities like hanging laundry and socializing on porches. The scene uses stark contrasts of light and dark to convey form and mood, influenced by the Ashcan School style.
Context: This print is closely related to an oil painting by Sheets with the title Tenement Flats (1934), which once hung in President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's White House office and is now in the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Both works were created while Sheets was involved with the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), a New Deal arts program.
Millard Sheets was known for his California Scene paintings and sympathetically portrayed poor people not as victims, but as human beings going about their lives.
Millard Sheets titled Family Flats. Created around 1934 or 1935, the work is a depiction of the bustling, crowded life in the Depression-era tenement housing of the Bunker Hill neighborhood in downtown Los Angeles.
Artwork Details
Artist: Millard Sheets (American, 1907–1989)
Title: Family Flats
Medium: Lithograph in black on paper
Date: Circa 1934-1935
Subject: The artwork portrays a dense urban scene featuring multi-story apartments, external staircases, and numerous figures engaged in daily activities like hanging laundry and socializing on porches. The scene uses stark contrasts of light and dark to convey form and mood, influenced by the Ashcan School style.
Context: This print is closely related to an oil painting by Sheets with the title Tenement Flats (1934), which once hung in President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's White House office and is now in the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Both works were created while Sheets was involved with the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), a New Deal arts program.
Millard Sheets was known for his California Scene paintings and sympathetically portrayed poor people not as victims, but as human beings going about their lives.
Disclaimer
The object and/or subject of this report is private property. This page is for informational purposes only. Unless clearly stated otherwise, all conservation and restoration has been performed by Poster Mountain (PM) or Los Angeles Paper Group (LAPG)I) PM-LAPG has not knowingly withheld any significant information from its evaluation report and to the best of its knowledge all statements and evaluations in this report are true and correct.
II) PM-LAPG stated in the Evaluation Report its own personal, unbiased and professional analysis, opinions and conclusions, which are subject to the assumptions and limited conditions in this evaluation report as set forth hereinabove.
III) PM-LAPG has no present or prospective interests in the property which is the subject matter of this report and it has no present or prospective personal interests or bias with respect to the participants in this matter.
IV) PM-LAPG and its employment and/or compensation for performing this evaluation or any future anticipated evaluation was not conditioned on any agreement or understanding, written or otherwise, that it would report (or present analysis in support) as predetermined specific authenticity, a predetermined evaluation that favors the cause of any party or the attainment of any specific result or occurrence of a specific subsequent event, such as value or marketability.
V) PM-LAPG prepared all opinions and conclusions about the subject property that were set forth in this Evaluation Report. If it has relied on significant evaluation assistance from any individual or individuals in the performance of this evaluation or the appropriation of this evaluation report, PM-LAPG has named such individuals and disclosed the specific task performed in this evaluation report. PM-LAPG certifies that any individual so named is qualified to the same extent as PM to perform the task. PM-LAPG has not authorized anyone to make a change to any item in this evaluation report, therefore, any change made to this evaluation is unauthorized and PM-LAPG will not take responsibility for it.
VI) The Client may not disclose or distribute this Evaluation Report to any potential purchasers of the subject property without first obtaining PM-LAPG's prior written consent. This consent must be obtained before this evaluation report may be disclosed or distributed to any other party, including, but not limited to, the public through advertising, public relations, news, sales, or other media.

