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Book Info | | | enlarge picture
| Lois Orswell, David Smith, and Modern Art | | Author: | Marjorie B. Cohn | ISBN: | 0300096941 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
William Corbett, Arts Media ...[B]eautifully designed...Carefully annotated...[A] testimonial...reveal[ing] [Orswell's] unique relationship with...Smith...[and]...passion for life and...sculpture...
Book Description Lois Orswell (1904-1998) was a pioneering collector of abstract expressionist art and modern sculpture. She was notable not only for the quality of her acquisitions but also for her exceptional position as a woman collector at a time when men dominated the art world. Orswell focused her attention on sculpture and drawings, rather than paintings, and her collection features the work of such canonical artists as Kline, de Kooning, Rodin, Calder, Moore, Nevelson, and many others. Of all these artists, none was more important than David Smith -- arguably the greatest American sculptor of the twentieth century -- and the book highlights the close connection between collector and artist. This handsome volume publishes for the first time the correspondence between Orswell and Smith, which sheds important new light on the sculptor's personality and professional practice. The book also tells the history of the Orswell Collection, which numbers over 340 objects and is housed at the Harvard University Art Museums. This book is published to coincide with an exhibition at the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, from September 21, 2002 to February 16, 2003.
From the Publisher Distributed for the Harvard University Art Museums
About the Author Marjorie B. Cohn is the Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Curator of Prints at the Fogg Art Museum and senior lecturer, History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University. Sarah B. Kianovsky is assistant curator of Paintings, Sculpture, and Decorative Arts at the Fogg Art Museum.
Lois Orswell, David Smith, and Modern Art FROM THE PUBLISHER "Lois Orswell (1904-1998) was a pioneering collector of abstract expressionist art and modern sculpture. A native of New England she was notable not only for the quality of her acquisitions but also for her exceptional position as a woman collector at a time when men dominated the art world. Unlike most of her contemporaries, Orswell focused her attention on sculpture and drawings, rather than paintings, and her collection features the work of such canonical artists as Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Auguste Rodin, Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, and many others. Of all these artists, none was more important than David Smith - arguably the greatest American sculptor of the twentieth century - and the book highlights the close connection between collector and artist." This illustrated volume publishes for the first time the correspondence between Orswell and Smith, which sheds important new light on the sculptor's personality and professional practice. The book also tells the history of the Orswell Collection, which numbers over 340 objects and is housed at the Harvard University Art Museums.
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