null
lock plus

An Educated Collector is Our Best Client

In business for nearly two decades, we are a well established, popular contemporary art boutique specializing in expertly chosen, blue chip prints, multiples, uniques, books, ephemera and merchandise at different price points, with a focus on the secondary market. Please click on the "Contact Us" button at the bottom of this page for questions about any work, pricing and/or to arrange to visit our showroom/gallery - located in between Manhattan's Flatiron and Chelsea Flower Districts.  


Dorothy Dehner, Untitled mid century modern sculptural study, 1955

Dorothy Dehner

CONTACT GALLERY FOR PRICE

Current Stock: 1

Description

Dorothy Dehner

Untitled mid century modern sculptural study, 1955

Brown marker on paper

Boldly signed, titled and dated by Dorothy Dehner on the lower right front

Frame included

Hand signed, titled and dated lower right front

This work is framed in a white wood museum quality frame with UV plexiglass.
Measurements:
Frame:
17.25 x 14.75 x 1.5 inches
Artwork:
10.25 x 7.75 inches

About Dorothy Dehner:
Just two years after beginning to make sculptures at age 54, Dorothy Dehner had her first one-woman exhibition at New York’s Willard Gallery. The Cleveland native had originally pursued an acting career. Moving to California in 1918, she took classes at the Pasadena Playhouse and majored in drama at the University of California, Los Angeles.

In 1922, she resettled in New York; three years later she set her sights on a career as a visual artist instead. For several years, Dehner studied painting at The Art Students League, getting to know emerging American modernists, including David Smith, whom she married in 1927.

While living in Brooklyn and, later, on the farm she and Smith shared at Bolton Landing in upstate New York, Dehner limited her artistic production to drawings and paintings, participating in only a few group shows. Her work at this point was figurative, alternating idyllic representations of her daily life on the farm with devastating, demonic images that reflected the deteriorating state of her marriage.

After she and Smith separated in 1950, Dehner became more active professionally, studying printmaking at William Stanley Hayter’s Atelier 17 and becoming known for her three-dimensional work. Initially creating cast-bronze sculpture, Dehner started working with wood in the mid-1970s. During the early 1980s, she produced enormous pieces in Corten steel—an alloy with a rusty appearance.
-Courtesy of National Museum of Women in the Arts

Measurements

Height:   17.25
Width:   14.75
Depth:   1.50