1. Asa Ames Exhibit at the American Folk Art Museum in New York

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    artwork: Phrenological Head, c. 1850 - Attributed to Asa Ames (1823 - 1851) Paint on wood - 16 3/8 x 13 x 7 1/8' - Collection American Folk Art Museum Bequest of Jeanette Virgin, 1981.24.1 - Photo by John Parnell, NY


    New York City - The exhibition "Asa Ames: Occupation Sculpturing" is the first devoted to the three-dimensional portraits carved by the elusive artist between 1847 and his death in 1851. Ames’s sculpture has been written about, published, and seen individually in group exhibitions, but this presentation is a unique opportunity to examine eight of his twelve known sculptures in an intimate, jewel-like installation. Although Asa Ames’s oeuvre was small, this exquisite group of polychrome carvings in wood, on loan from public and private collections, represents some of the most beautiful and sensitive American sculptures of the mid-19th century.

    Organized by Stacy C. Hollander, senior curator and director of exhibitions, the exhibition "Asa Ames: Occupation Sculpturing" is on view at the American Folk Art Museum through September 14, 2008.

    Asa Ames (1823-1851) immortalized family members, neighbors and friends in the vicinity of Evans, Erie County, New York. Included in the artist’s small body of work are portraits of young men and women, and children. Sensitively portrayed as either life size bust-, waist-, or full-length figures, they have few antecedents in early American folk sculpture because of the private nature of the portraits. Like much painted portraiture of the day, the representations are iconic in their pared-down simplicity and absolute frontality, lending to the air of timelessness that imbues the carvings.

    The life-size, full-length figure of Susan Ames, carved in 1849, depicts the artist’s niece, his brother Henry’s daughter. As in all his work, Ames accurately described details and texture of clothing and hair through precise carving and the application of paint. In this regard, it resonates with conventions of painted portraiture. However, as a fully realized volumetric sculpture, it occupies space and sheds light on the gestures that are often seen in folk portraits of children. This sculpture moved west with the family and was recently rediscovered in the Boulder History Museum where it had been placed by a descendent in the 1960s.

    artwork: Asa Ames (1823–1851) 'Susan Ames. Evans' Dated December 1849 Paint on wood, 35 x 9 x 8 1/2' Boulder History Museum, Boulder, Colorado - Photo by Vivian Leaver-Hauschul One of the major works in the museum’s collection is the mysterious Phrenological Head. It was probably carved around 1850 during the time that Ames lived in the household of Dr. Harvey B. Marvin, a physician and practitioner of alternative therapies. The carving has the specificity of a portrait and depicts a young child with delicate features wearing a red dress. The deeply carved puffed sleeves contrast with the rhythmic linearity of the pleated bodice and skirt. The child’s impassive expression becomes a blank canvas for the phrenological map that is marked on her head, closely following the chart popularized by the Fowler brothers.

    Ames’s work is usually discussed within the genre of ship and trade figure carving. His own sense of himself as an artist may be gleaned in the Federal Census of 1850, where his occupation is listed as "sculpturing." This has prompted a consideration of his art within a broader framework of sculptural traditions, from Renaissance marble busts, primarily of male children, to classical-inspired marble statuary in the Italianate tradition by Horatio Greenough and Hiram Powers, to those associated with the rural cemetery movement that was burgeoning in the 1840s.

    “Although details of Ames’s history remain shrouded in shadow, the work of his hands illuminates the meaningful and personal nature of the lives he captured so beautifully in wood,” comments Ms. Hollander.

    In conjunction with the exhibition, a number of public programs have been arranged. Visit the American Folk Art Museum at : www.folkartmuseum.org/


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