When we think of sculpture in the twentieth century, it is the remarkable strides by artists working with abstraction that first come to mind--the allusive forms of Picasso, Gonzalez, Calder, and Mir6, and later David Smith, Mark di Suvero, Donald Judd, and many others who took turns at the manipulation of form without the necessity of an accompanying narrative. But in the first half of the century, a Polish immigrant named Elie Nadelman, having inflected classical style with a sleek attenuation characteristic of Futurists such as Brancusi, ultimately made himself at home in the vernacular of American folk art, replete with narrative, and established himself as one of the century's best sculptors.
When we think of sculpture in the twentieth century, it is the remarkable strides by artists working with abstraction that first come to mind--the allusive forms of Picasso, Gonzalez, Calder, and Mir6, and later David Smith, Mark di Suvero, Donald Judd, and many others who took turns at the manipulation of form without the necessity of an accompanying narrative. But in the first half of the century, a Polish immigrant named Elie Nadelman, having inflected classical style with a sleek attenuation characteristic of Futurists such as Brancusi, ultimately made himself at home in the vernacular of American folk art, replete with narrative, and established himself as one of the century's best sculptors.
Foreword
Maxwell L. Anderson
Elie Nadelman: Sculptor of Modern Life
Formative Experiences: Poland, 1882--1903
An Aesthetic Emerges: Munich, 1904
Launching a Career: Paris, 1904--09
Statement of Aesthetic Principles: Camera Work, 1910
Paterson Gallery and Helena Rubinstein: London, 1911
Success Accelerates: Paris, 1912--14
Unintentional Immigration and Meteoric Success: New york, 1914--17
Whimsical Insouciance: Plaster Genre Figures, 1917--19
Tubular Modernity: Wood and Bronze Genre Figures, 1920--25
Nadelman as Collector: The Museum of Folk Arts
Galvano-Plastiques, 1925--27
Toward a Domestic Market: Small-Scale Papier-maches and Terra-cottas, 1928--35
The Depression and Its Consequences, 1929--35
An Art of Flux, Anxiety, and Uncertainty: Miniature Figurines, 1938--46
Notes
Exhibition History
Chronology
Selected Bibliography and Writings by Nadelman
Acknowledgments
Lenders to the Exhibition
Index