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Fine Sculpture by African-American Artists: Fall 2019

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At Auction October 8

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Discoveries abound in our fall 2019 auction of African-American Fine Art, with a fine selection of sculpture. Two of Augusta Savage’s most well-known works, Gamin, circa 1929, and Lift Every Voice and Sing (The Harp) are featured, alongside a superb example of Sargent Johnson’s work in terra cotta. An early work by artist Richard Hunt, whose sculpture can be seen in museums across the country, lends a playful note to the section, while evocative works by Elizabeth Catlett and Selma Burke provide contemplative counterpoints.

 
 

Selma Burke

 

Selma Burke’s Sadness is among the most significant works by Burke to come to auction. While her sculpture is scarce, her most famous work can be seen by almost anyone: she’s best-known for the bas-relief portrait of Franklin Delano Roosevelt that came to be put on the dime. Sadness, carved in green marble, dates to 1970 and relates to a 1951 version of the figure that can be found in the Selma Burke Collection at Spelman College’s Museum of Fine Art.

 
green marble figure crouched over in grief
Selma Burke, Sadness, carved green marble, 1970. $12,000 to $18,000.
   
 

Elizabeth Catlett

 

The two sculptures in the auction by Elizabeth Catlett show the scope of her career. A striking modern cast bronze portrait of her granddaughter Naima dates to 1998—one of the artist’s last works in bronze—while a large carved mahogany sculpture of a seated woman is the earliest wood sculpture by Catlett to come to auction. The auction also features several lithographs and linoleum cuts by Catlett, who was also a prolific printmaker.

 
bronze bust of an african-american woman with cyan hair tie
Elizabeth Catlett, Naima, cast bronze with patina and polychrome, 1998. $25,000 to $35,000.
 
contemplative seated woman carved dark brown wood
Elizabeth Catlett, Seated Woman, carved mahogany, 1962. $100,000 to $150,000.
   
 

Richard Hunt

 
whimsical figure on unicycle mounted on wood base
Richard Hunt, Unicycle, soldered wire, circa 1956. $3,000 to $5,000.
   
 

Sargent Johnson

 

Sargent Johnson’s Head of a Negro Boy has been in the same family collection since it was acquired directly from the artist by Herbert L. Rothschild, a notable patron of the arts and silent-pictures pioneer in San Francisco. It was shown at the World’s Fair Exhibition of the Chicago Art League in 1934, and is an outstanding example of Johnson’s modernist work of the 1930s. Of the small number of stylized heads created by Johnson during this period, few are known to survive today. This sculpture exemplifies the artist’s interest in modernism and African sculpture, blending elements of both, while conveying strength and dignity as a portrait—a hallmark of Johnson’s portrayal of women and children in sculpture.

 
terra cotta bust of a young boy painted brown
Sargent Johnson, Head of a Negro Boy, painted terra cotta, circa 1934. $80,000 to $120,000.
   
 

Augusta Savage

 
group of choir singers shaped like a harp
Augusta Savage, Lift Every Voice and Sing (The Harp), metal cast with patina, circa 1939. $15,000 to $25,000.
 
plaster bust of a young boy wearing a newsboy cap
Augusta Savage, Gamin, painted plaster, circa 1929. $20,000 to $30,000.
   
 

African American Fine Art: Fall 2019

From Abstract Expressionists to Color Field Painters

Women of Color Featured in African-American Fine Art

 
 

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The post Fine Sculpture by African-American Artists: Fall 2019 appeared first on Swann Galleries News.


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