Exhibition Explores Influence Of Three Women On Work Of Renowned American Sculptor And Woodworker Wharton Esherick
First-Of-Its-Kind Show To Be At Michener Art Museum
October 15, 2021
The Michener Art Museum is pleased to announce the opening of a new exhibition highlighting the influences that shaped the work of sculptor and woodworker Wharton Esherick. Daring Design: The Impact of Three Women on Wharton Eshericks Craft will run through Feb. 6, 2022. The exhibition explores the significant impact of three women--industrialist Helene Fischer, artist Hanna Weil, and photographer Marjorie Content--on Eshericks career and development at a pivotal creative moment for the artist in the 1930s. Fischer and Content supported Esherick financially through commissions of his work, and all three women provided artistic inspiration and propelled the artist to conceive new ideas that pushed the boundaries between fine art and functional design. Featuring innovative furniture pieces designed by Esherick for Fischer, Weil, and Content, as well as artwork created by Weil and Content, Daring Design investigates the visual and material dialogue between these artists and patrons. The support and collaboration from Fischer, Weil, and Content allowed Wharton Esherick to produce some of his most innovative work during the Great Depression, when many artists struggled financially, and yet the impact these women had on his art and career is not widely recognized, said Kate Quinn, executive director of Michener Art Museum. We are thrilled to bring this first-of-its-kind exhibition to the public to explore the connections between these women who so profoundly influenced Eshericks work. Daring Design features several works on loan from the Wharton Esherick Museum located in the artists former studio in Chester County, near Malvern, Pa. Quinn also serves on the board of director of the Wharton Esherick Museum. In addition, a special group of objects are on loan from the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Wharton Esherick blurred the traditional separation between fine art and craft, adding personal expression to everything he created, whether furniture, sculpture, or the architecture of his own home and studio, said Julie Siglin, executive director of the Wharton Esherick Museum. His work continues to inspire new generations of artists and woodworkers, and we are proud to collaborate with Michener Art Museum on this exhibit that investigates the inspiration he gained from his early female patrons. As a sculptor, Esherick worked primarily in wood and extended his unique forms to furniture, furnishings, interiors, buildings, and more. Now recognized as a leader of the Studio Furniture Movement, Esherick saw himself as an artist and his concern was with form, not technique. He pursued his artistic vision in forms that might turn to furniture or other sculptural furnishings, but that was just one aspect of his art, which was complemented by the paintings, prints, drawings, poetry, and sculpture he also created. Daring Design: The Impact of Three Women on Wharton Eshericks Craft is co-curated by Michener Art Museums chief curator Laura Turner Igoe, Ph.D., and woodworker Mark Sfirri, a leading authority on Esherick and his life. This is one in a series of American art exhibitions created through a multi-year, multi-institutional partnership formed by the Philadelphia Museum of Art as part of the Art Bridges Initiative. The Michener Art Museum is located at 138 S. Pine St., Doylestown, Pa. For more information, visit www.MichenerArtMuseum.org or call 215-340-9800.
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