Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Oil on canvas, unsigned, framed.
Frame dimensions 26 x 37 1/2 in.
Born in Connecticut, Clark began his artistic journey at Hartford Art School and went on to attend the Rhode Island School of Design and Cranbrook Academy of Art. After receiving his MFA from Cranbrook in 1953, Clark set up a studio in New York City's West Village, consistently exhibiting his work through the 1950s and '60s. Clark held prominent place in the city's modern art scene - 10th street in particular having been a hub for the second generation of Abstract Expressionists including Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning.
Working within the art colony of New York's AbEx artists, Clark produced numerous distinctive paintings before turning to sculpture. He initially created Art Brut forms using scrap wood he retrieved from the street but then transitioned to expressive human figures. Both his paintings and sculpture varied in size from modest to monumental.
Clark continued to produce work late into his life and showed in galleries throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and North Carolina - including the Center of the Earth Gallery in Charlotte. The May 14, 1995 edition of
The New York Times notes his style, “Mr. Clark has developed an ingenious vocabulary for representing the figure… [his] best effort may be the bust… It is Brancusi with chic added.” Clark's sculpture was also featured in the action/drama film “Body Count” (1998).
Some rubbing to frame; light surface grime.