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Three-panel folding screen

Wharton Esherick (American, 1887–1970)
1927
Object Place: Paoli, Pennsylvania

Medium/Technique Walnut, ebony
Dimensions Each panel 168.9 x 30.5 x 2.5 cm (66 1/2 x 12 x 1 in.)
Credit Line Henry H. and Zoe Oliver Sherman Fund
Accession Number2006.1891
CollectionsAmericas
Wharton Esherick's artistic furniture and independent lifestyle made him a seminal figure in the American studio craft movement. Trained as a painter, and active in printmaking, Esherick was especially gifted in handling wood as a sculptural material. This screen relates closely to his woodblock prints of the 1920s; its chip-carved and chiseled decorations portray an abstracted landscape in low relief. The vertical edges of the panels represent tree trunks, whose bare limbs branch out across the sky in which three blackbirds fly. The lower half of the screen depicts a patchwork of farm fields with sheaves of grain, reflecting the rural environment surrounding Esherick's Pennsylvania studio.

DescriptionWalnut three-panel folding screen, extensively chiseled and chip-carved with alternating geometric patterns, depicting a landscape of three birds in ebony flying over sheaves of wheat and corn.
Signed Signed and dated "WHARTON ESHERICK / MCMXXVII" in a rectangle
ProvenanceProbably about 1930s-1940s, acquired by Molly Dade, New York; 1958, given by Molly Dade to her relatives, Neil Sandow (b. 1928 – d. 2004) and Beverly Sandow (b. 1929 -- d. 2005), Santa Cruz, CA; October 21--22, 2006, sale (consigned by the Beverly Sandow estate), Sollo Rago Modern Auction, Lambertville, NJ, lot 433 to the MFA. (Accession Date: December 13, 2006)
Copyright© On behalf of Wharton Esherick's children