Frank Applebee Papers
Scope and Contents
This accession contains correspondence, inventories, articles, newspaper clippings, notes, booklets, and publicity documents. These items detail the acquisition of 36 paintings from the State Department by the Art Department at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (API, now Auburn University) under the leadership of department head Frank Applebee. These paintings were originally part of a large group of 117 paintings purchased by the State Department’s Office of International Information and Cultural Activities in 1946 as part of its “Advancing American Art” collection of modern artwork produced in the United States. This collection was first displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York before being sent overseas to Europe and South America. American politicians criticized the artwork as subversive, causing Secretary of State George Marshall to recall the traveling displays from Cuba and Czechoslovakia. In light of the political tension they caused, President Truman designated all 117 paintings as war surplus so they could be sold by the War Assets Administration. Applebee quickly learned about the sale of these paintings and acted quickly to place the first bid for this artwork on behalf of the API Art Department in 1948. Thanks to his efforts and the support he received from Acting President Ralph Brown Draughon and state political figures, API received 36 of these paintings at a 95% discount. Unfortunately API had nowhere to store or display the paintings. After being unsuccessfully stored in various offices around campus, the paintings were housed on loan to the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. The paintings became a permanent collection of the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art with the museum’s opening in 2003.
Dates
- 1926-1991
Conditions Governing Access
Open
Biographical / Historical
Frank Applebee was born in 1902 in Boston, Massachusetts. He attended Massachusetts College of Art and joined the faculty of Alabama Polytechnic Institute (API, now Auburn University) in 1926 where he taught drawing and painting even before an art department existed. He received his bachelor’s degree and his master’s degree in art. Applebee was the first faculty member of the Art Department when it formed in 1928 and became the head of the department in 1930. In 1948 he led the effort to acquire modern American paintings from the State Department. His effort was successful and resulted in API receiving 36 paintings that would become a permanent art collection at the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art in 2003. After API became Auburn University, Applebee served as acting dean of the School of Architecture and Fine Arts twice: once for the year 1961-1962 and again in 1968-1969. He retired in 1969 as professor emeritus. Applebee was involved in numerous professional associations and produced artwork of his own while teaching. He died in 1988 at the age of 86.
Extent
1 Cubic Feet
Language of Materials
English
- Title
- Guide to the Frank Applebee Papers
- Author
- Processed by: Jaimie Kicklighter, Debbie Fletcher Digitized by: Noah Biblis
- Date
- 7/2/2015; 3/8/1990
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Auburn University Special Collections and Archives Repository
Auburn University
Ralph Brown Draughon Library
231 Mell Street
Auburn Alabama 36849
334-844-1732
archives@auburn.edu