Murals In the 1930s, Poor aided her stepfather,
Henry Varnum Poor, in painting murals for the
United States Justice Department and the Conservation of American Wildlife for the
Department of the Interior, located in
Washington, D.C. Poor's skills were recognized independently from her father when she received her own
Section of Painting and Sculpture mural commission for the
Depew, New York, post office in 1941, and the
Gleason, Tennessee, post office in 1942. The mural over the Depew post office is titled
Beginning the Day and features a scene of mostly men interacting and conducting business. It has been described by scholar Sylvia Moore that this particular mural showcases
Piero della Francesca's influence on Poor with the figures clustered together in small carefully balanced groups. Due to her success in these murals, in 1948 Poor won the Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Fellowship, which included a grant that enabled her to study in
Italy and
Greece.
Bessie Breuer's literary agent, Bernice Baumgarten, happened to be married to James Gould Cozzens, first employed under the
U.S. Army Air Forces and then by the USAAF Office of Information Services. In her journal, she described the experience of watching the wounded unloaded by forklift, transferred to ambulances headed to the Field Hospital, before finally being transferred to hospitals across the country for more specialized medical treatment. Regardless, the
Army Art Program ended in 1943 to eliminate what was deemed an unnecessary war expenditure. Instead, Poor's dream of sketching the war abroad was made possible by
Fortune magazine and their request for her to illustrate a feature article for the
Air Transport Command. In order to be granted the freedom to travel anywhere, at any time, and with no conditions attached, Captain Cunningham had Poor discharged from the
Women's Army Corps before she set off to the
Pacific Theater. During this time, Poor began to create her most emotional and thought-provoking works depicting wounded soldiers, make-shift operation rooms, and psychiatric patients suffering from the horrors of war. While in
Manila, Philippines, she specifically sketched patients with both physical and psychiatric wounds. Addressing a doctor in charge of the psychiatric ward, he expressed to Poor, "Most people in familiar circumstances can deal with stress, but the emotional trauma of war destroys their ability to cope." Being rather adventurous, Poor continued her travels to China, a direct disobeyment for leaving her assigned theater of operations. After noticing a group of Chinese soldiers in the Manila Airport terminal, Poor found herself joining the crew. Landing in
Kunming after an eventful experience of a failed propeller, the crew asked her to join the rest of their journey of flying around the world, ending in
New York. However, Poor turned the offer down, describing how she did not desire to fly
The Hump, the eastern end of the Himalayan Mountains, which was extremely dangerous and made more difficult by a lack or absence of reliable charts, radio navigation aids, and weather information. Once finishing her tour of duty, Poor returned home and submitted all of her work— sketches and paintings– to her boss Lafarge, an officer with the
Air Transport Command. However, for reasons unknown, the U.S. Army rejected her work, granting Poor the ability to exhibit and show her wartime creations.
Grecian drawings with text by Henry Miller Winning the Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Fellowship in 1948 for her successful murals allowed Poor to study in both
Italy and
Greece. She returned from the trip two years later with suitcases full of sketchbooks containing watercolors and ink creations. Although this trip was conducted shortly after the end of
WWII, a published book of her Grecian sketches did not come to fruition until 1964 with the collaborative efforts of author
Henry Miller. Accompanying Poor's artwork, Miller gave detailed memories coinciding with each illustration. He stated in the book: It appears that Poor's and Miller's relationship began in
Paris, France. In 1937 she studied under painter
Abraham Rattner, who happened to be close friends with Miller. == Styles and influences ==