12018-12-05T20:37:11+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a612Compared to today's 40-hour week minimum, staff members at the Roswell Museum worked fewer hours in the 1930s, reflecting limited budgets and funding. In the case of Gallery Attendant Rainey Woolsey, 30 hours a week, or 120 hours per month, was the maximum amoung allotted, with the workday lasting from 1:30-5:30 pm. The first hour would be spent preparing reports , with the gallery opening to the public at 2. Courtesy of the Roswell Museum and Art Center archive.plain2018-12-11T02:51:41+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a6
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12018-12-05T20:46:37+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a6Woolsey Report, page 1Sara Woodbury6Staff members were expected to submit reports reviewing their activities. This report comes from Rainey Woolsey, who served as Gallery Attendant between 1937 and 1938. Transcription: "The Gallery at the Roswell Museum has a new exhibition on drawing showing a variety in style and execution in ink, pencil, crayon, and chalk. This exhibition, assembled in California, is one of many arranged for the federal art centers by (illeg) in Washington, DC. In this show, Nevada and California artists are represented. Several pictures represent (something) for decoration of public buildings, those by Helen Foris and Dorothy Puccinelli are sketches for a mural....plain812018-12-08T02:24:42+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a6
12018-11-30T02:20:40+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a6Gallery: Roswell Museum ArchiveSara Woodbury18structured_gallery12021-01-04T16:10:26+00:00Sara Woodbury0728ed579323b05939a9848207524f979d17d2a6