Lucienne Bloch

Lucienne attended the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris at 14, apprenticing with sculptor Antoine Bourdelle and painter Andre Lhote.

She took the only existing photographs of Rivera's (controversially) destroyed mural, Man at the Crossroads, in Rockefeller Center Plaza in New York City.

As a WPA/FAP artist, she completed murals for public buildings, including the House of Detention for Women in New York City, and the Fort Thomas, Kentucky post office.

[7] The mural for the House of Detention for Women commissioned by the Federal Arts Project was entitled The Cycle of a Woman's Life.

[8][9] She also illustrated numerous children's books, of which the Library of Congress lists: In 1956 Bloch's prints were included in the exhibition "Women Printmakers" at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

The Cycle of a Woman's Life, 1936 print