New Esherick exhibit at BRM

You are currently viewing New Esherick exhibit at BRM
The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick is open now and runs through Jan. 19.

The new Wharton Esherick exhibit is different than most exhibits at the Brandywine River Museum of Art. There are still some hang-on-the-wall types of paintings and wood blocks, but there are also functional furniture and sculptures

“It’s so much different than people expect…We were interested in highlighting some of the other artists working in suburban Philadelphia, rural Pennsylvania at the same time as the Wyeths,” BRM Senior Curator Amanda Burdan said.

Oblivion, by Wharton Esherick, 1934. Walnut. The piece was inspired by an embrace of two actors in the play The Son of Perdition by Lynn Riggs.

Wharton Esherick, considered the father of the Studio Furniture Movement, lived from 1887 to 1970. He was born in Philadelphia and later moved to Malvern where there is now a Wharton Esherick Museum, which co-organized the exhibit at BRM.

“We’re so happy to bring these works out of the studio — of course, they belong there, and you should always experience them there —arranged in a way that gives a curatorial thesis, themes to follow through in a way to see things that you would never see together in a studio.”

The exhibit, The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick, includes more than 70 works and is the first to draw exclusively from the Wharton Esherick Museum’s collection of more than 3,000 pieces.

Burdan expressed how impressed she is with not only Esherick’s work but the times in which he was working, the times shared with another famous artist.

“He starts as a painter and is an artist who totally embraces and holistically takes over this aesthetic through printmaking and sculpture and furniture. And I just love what was happening simultaneously with N.C. Wyeth’s career,” she said. “It shows us this very artistic landscape of American art…We’re expanding, not just showing not just American art in general, but finding American art that has connections with our collection, with our mission, with our region.”

Esherick is considered the "father of the Studio Furniture Movement.

Emily Zilber, the director of Curatorial Affairs & Strategic partnerships of the Wharton Esherick Museum, said some of the items on display at the Brandywine had never left the WEM before. Others have not left in more than 50 years.

“These objects either had a life with Esherick for the duration of their existence, or they were out in the world but have not had a chance to make their second debut.,” Zilber said.

She went on to say that guests at the WEM get only one vision, how the objects but, “What you have here at the Brandywine will allow [visitors] to see those objects more similar to how Esherick would have staged them in his retrospective in the 1950s, but also in the context of a bigger art museum where you can see from different vantage points, where you can really engage with the objects on their own terms.”

The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick is open now and runs through Jan. 19.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 3.50 out of 5)
Loading...

Comments

comments

Leave a Reply