Chaim Gross
Chaim Gross (1904 Austria--1991 USA) will always be
remembered as one of the foremost American sculptors who
practiced direct carving in wood. This installation of graphic
works and sculptures in wood and bronze, executed between 1932
and 1976, celebrates his long, prolific career and the beneficent
gift of his Acrobatic Performers from the Renee and Chaim Gross
Foundation.
Born in the Carpathian Mountains in Austrian Galicia, Gross
was the son of a lumber merchant. He displayed an interest in
drawing at an early age and throughout his life produced a
prodigious number of graphic works, many of which were
preparatory studies for his sculptures. After a turbulent
nomadic existence caused by World War I, Gross immigrated to New
York City in 1921. He first studied drawing in night classes at
the Educational Alliance art school while working during the day
as a delivery boy.
A friend's remark that Gross's drawings had a very
sculptural quality provided the impetus to study this medium at
the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, where he was briefly taught by Elie Nadelman. In 1927 he attended the Art Students League,
receiving only two months of instruction in direct carving from
Robert Laurent. That same year he quit his job in order to
concentrate on art and to begin a teaching career in sculpture at
the Educational Alliance, which would continue until 1989. In
1932, in the midst of the Depression, Gross had his first solo
exhibition at The Gallery 144 in New York. Like many other artists,
he benefited greatly from the support of the New Deal's Public
Works of Art Project. In the late 1930s the Treasury
Department's Section of Painting and Sculpture commissioned him
to execute several works for federal buildings; these helped to
establish him as a major contemporary sculptor.
Gross gained renown as an advocate of direct carving.
Between 1926 and 1949, seventy-five percent of his works were in
wood and ten percent in stone. Although he used hand tools
exclusively, he preferred the hardest woods, particularly those
with a dark color or pronounced grain. In contrast, however, he
favored soft but colorful stone. His sculptures were
predominantly totemic, figurative images of women. The human
body became a source of abstract invention in which Gross
simplified forms to stress dynamic rhythms; realism was
secondary. Every carving represented a synthesis of form and
medium. He distorted forms to retain the cylindrical sensation
of the block of wood. A sense of compression in the shapes
infused them with an expansiveness and a monumentality.
After World War II, Gross began to explore different subjects and techniques. The loss of family members in the
Holocaust provoked an interest in Judaic subject matter. By
1957, sculptures modeled in plaster on an armature for casting in
bronze began to outnumber his direct carvings. In contrast to
his carvings, the bronzes revealed a new freedom to extend forms
into space and incorporate space into his compositions. In
building up the plasters, he utilized carving techniques that
contributed to the angular forms characteristic of his bronzes.
For more than sixty years Chaim Gross's art has expressed
optimistic, affirming themes. His acrobats, cyclists, and
mothers and children convey joyfulness, exuberance, love, and
intimacy. This aspect of his work remained consistent with his
Hasidic heritage, which teaches that "only in his childlike
happiness is man nearest to God."
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