| Harry
Bertoia (American, 1915 - 1978)
A sculptor of kinetic objects,
many of them with mazes of thin rods that appear brush like,
Harry Bertoia was born in San Lorenzo, Italy, and came to America
in 1930. In 1936, he studied at the Detroit Society of Arts
and Crafts and then attended Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield,
Michigan, where he later taught and established the metalworking
department. During this time, he began experimenting with jewelry
forms and explored ideas that would later emerge into his sculpture.
In 1943, he moved to Venice, California and worked with designer
Charles Eames in war efforts until 1946. That first year, he
attended a welding class at Santa Monica City College. In 1947,
he moved to La Jolla to work in the Point Loma Navel Electronics
Laboratory in the publications department creating training
manuals for equipment operators. During this time, he continued
making jewelry and monoprints and began his first experiments
with metal sculpture.
In 1949, he moved to Barto, Pennsylvania where he joined Hans
Knoll in Knoll Associates. He became a prolific architectural
sculptor. His first commission was a screen for the General
Motors Technical Center in Warren, Michigan. His first sculpture
exhibition was in 1951 at the Knoll Showroom in New York.
It was his custom not to sign his works because he believed
that the piece itself was a signature, that what he created
belonged to the universe, and that a signature called attention
to the artist rather than the work of art.
Credit:
Jeffrey Head, Phillips de Pury & Luxembourg catalogue of
11/19/2002
Matthew Baigell, "Dictionary of American Art"
To Artist Showroom
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