詳情
together with a carving knife, used by Wilhelm Schimmel (by repute), its case later inscribed and dated W. Schimmel 1890
10 in. (25.4 cm.) high, 1614 in. (41.3 cm.) wide, approximately 312 in. (8.9 cm.) deep
來源
The eagle and knife:
Hattie Klapp Brunner Antiques, Reinholds, Pennsylvania
S. Stevens, 1950
Long, Long Ago Shop, York, Pennsylvania, 1975
John Wills, York, 1985
榮譽呈獻

拍品專文

The legacy of German immigrant Wilhelm Schimmel (1817-1890) lives in his spirited pine animals, animated with gesso and paint and carved in exchange for room and board from families around Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Schimmel fashioned lions, roosters, dogs, and other figures, but his most successful sculptures are majestic spread-wing eagles. He carved the eagle’s body and wings separately, articulating them with angular, choppy feathers and joining them in the final construction. He primed his surface and added color and depth through red, brown and yellow paints that bring the bird to life.

A notorious figure in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Schimmel was memorialized in an obituary published in the Carlisle [Pennsylvania] Sentinel 7 August 1890: “Old Schimmel, the German who for many years trampled through this and adjoining counties, died at the almshouse on Sunday. His only occupation was carving heads of animals out of soft pinewood. He was apparently a man of very surly disposition.” For more information on Schimmel's life, see Karl H. Pass, "Wilhelm Schimmel: Cumberland County Image Maker (1817-1890)," Folk Art, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 52-59. His work is in the collections of multiple major museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Winterthur Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the New-York Historical Society.

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