"Sculptor and His Model" Lot no. 425
By Benton Clark (1895-1964)
36.00" x 44.00", Framed 46.00" x 54.00"
Oil on Canvas
Signed Upper Right
REQUEST PRICE
PURCHASE REQUEST
Explore related art collections: Romance / Liquor/Beer / Dark/Somber / Men / Women as Subjects / Fashion / $20,000 - $50,000
See all original artwork by Benton Clark
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Benton Clark owed much, as have all subsequent painter of the Old West, to Frederic Remington and his authoritative recording of that period. Benton also greatly admired Harvey Dunn and Frank Hoffman for their work in the western genre.
The son of a harness maker in Coshocton, Ohio, Benton Clark knew horses, wagons, and all the details in harnessing horses. Since he specialized in historic subject matter, his knowledge of horses was invaluable.
Clark’s own contribution is in dramatically synthesizing the era in a robust and colorful way. His illustrations make the past alive and convincing.
Benton was trained at the Art Institute of Chicago and the art school of the National Academy of Design in New York. His early work was in the art department for M-G-M in Culver City, California; for the Stevens-Sundblom Studio; and in the King Studio, both in Chicago.
He first illustrated for Liberty magazine in 1927, and subsequently for most of the other major magazines including The Saturday Evening Post, McCall’s, Cosmopolitan, Blue Book, and Good Housekeeping.