Sculpting with Rhoda Sherbell (Smithsonian, MOMA Artist, "Aaron Copland," "Yogi Berra," "Casey Stengel") - 011
New York Startup Attorney Michael Prywes Interviews Successful
Artists and Entrepreneurs
1 Stunde 38 Minuten
Beschreibung
vor 9 Jahren
Rhoda Sherbell is an American sculptor whose work has been
compared to Rodin's. She has been commissioned by the
Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY as well as private
commissions from Yogi Berra, Casey Stengel, Aaron Copland, among
a host of other celebrities. Her sculptures are in the
permanent collections of twenty-five museums throughout the
country, including the the Museum of Modern Art, the Smithsonian
American Art Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, the Jewish
Museum, the State Museum of Connecticut, William Benton Museum of
Art, and the Brooklyn Museum. She is a member of the
National Academy Museum, and is on the board of the Portrait
Society of America. In 1960, Rhoda was inducted into the
American Academy of Arts and Letters alongside Philip Roth and
Norman Mailer. In 2013, the National Association of Women Artists
awarded Ms. Sherbell as Artist of the Year, an award
previously bestowed upon such luminaries of the art world as
Mary Cassatt and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney.
Notes from the show:
She grew up going to Brooklyn Museum of Art; she didn't love
Rembrandt's as her father had. She loved the Egyptian rooms; she
would hug the giant cat sculptures.
Her father believed you weren't a complete person if you didn't
have a fill exposure to the arts and literature.
Her parents wanted her to go to Cooper Union, but the artists she
admired were all at the Arts Students League. She asked for, and
received, a scholarship, and asked to study with Reginald Marsh
and William Zorach.
She was by far the youngest student there in the 1950s, and
Zorach took her under his wing and called her "Baby." He quickly
asked MOMA to have her teach sculpting during Christmas break.
Rhoda works on a half-dozen to a dozen pieces at a time.
Her focus now is a series called "The Woman's Question."
She was not interested in portraiture until Zorach asked her to
do a portrait of him and his wife Marguerite.
She was not and is not interested in commercialism and wonders if
it is a fault. She is interested in exploring "truth."
It was tough to be a woman in sculpture in the 50s and 60s. But
she became an academician very early.
"You never feel like you arrived. There's always another hill to
climb."
Oronzio Maldarelli didn't want her to be in the American Academy
of Arts and Letters because she was a woman, and it would be "a
wasted vote."
The foundry with which she initially worked would ignore her and
only take care of men. She eventually switched to "Roman Bronze."
The owner of the Portland Sea Dogs Boston Red Sox affiliate
commissioned her to sculpt "American Baseball Family."
Zorach didn't use tools, but Rhoda likes tools--she will use
anything that works.
Rhoda doesn't sketch, because then the sketch becomes the work of
art, and she doesn't want to do a second version.
Rhoda would not take photographs of her subjects.
She recommends going to Shu Swamp Nature Preserve in Mill Neck,
NY.
She sculpts from memory, sometimes in the near dark.
You should always strive for a "unity of opposites" in line and
volume.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is her favorite museum.
Artists must acknowledge and try to connect with an audience.
She loves Pierre Puvis de Chavannes' paintings.
Her discovery that "Las Meninas" by Velasquez was painted
impasto.
"Spirit of the Dance" killed William Zorach.
"Artists need a William Zorach in their life."
Rhoda always knows when to stop sculpting a certain piece.
Yogi Berra was lots of fun. His wife was fiercely protective of
him. He wanted "Sherbell portrait" like Casey Stengel had.
Percy and Joanne Uris were Rhoda's Medici-like patrons.
The story of Aaron Copland's confused Great Dane.
The camaraderie of MacDowell's Artists Colony and Rhoda's
decision to leave.
"To be an artist, you need to know who you are.""
"If you're a person of purpose, you have to say 'My time is
valuable, I'm not going to live forever. Protect the time..."
This podcast hosted by New York attorney Michael Prywes was
sponsored by Prywes Schwartz, PLLC, a law firm devoted to artists
and entrepreneurs.
This podcast may contain attorney advertising. Prior results do
not guarantee future outcomes.
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