CHADDS FORD, PA.- The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick explores the artistic legacy of Wharton Esherick (1887-1970), one of the most creative and interdisciplinary figures of twentieth-century American art, craft and design. Co-organized by the Brandywine and the Wharton Esherick Museum (WEM), this major exhibition details the artists career from his early woodcut illustrations for books by the avant-garde literati to his revolutionary reimagining of furniture forms as organic sculpture. The Crafted World features more than 70 works by the artist and is the first exhibition to draw exclusively from WEMs collection of over 3,000 objects. The exhibition brings together works from across different media mastered by the artistfrom painting, sculpture and printmaking to woodworking, furniture making and illustrationincluding many objects never before seen outside of Eshericks home and studio. The Crafted World debuts at the Brandywine and will be on view through January 19, 2025. The Museum has also organized a two-venue travel tour for the exhibition that will raise the profile of this remarkable artist.
Esherick is best known as the father of the Studio Furniture Movement, which saw artists bringing their unique voices to handmade, functional objects and craft traditions, often reinventing them with bold, experimental techniques and forms. He grew up in West Philadelphia and later moved to Malvern, PA, where he built his own home and studio on the slope of Valley Forge Mountain. Now operated as WEM, this National Historic Landmark for Architecture houses the worlds largest collection of Eshericks artworks, spanning seven decades of artistic practice. Eshericks creative work was inseparable from his personal identity, said Emily Zilber, WEMs Director of Curatorial Affairs & Strategic Partnerships, and curator of the exhibition. He considered his hand-crafted hillside home and studio, which he designed and built between 1926 and 1966, the best representation of his iconoclastic vision, calling it an autobiography in three dimensions. It is significant, then, that The Crafted World is the largest exhibition ever organized from the remarkable collection housed in the artists home and studio.
The Crafted World is being presented in thematic vignettes that focus attention on recurring design explorations across Eshericks body of creative work. Through a variety of forms, formats and media, these vignettes invite visitors to examine the artists unconventional way of life and some of his key artistic interestsurban versus rural life, the movement of the body in space, the power of patterns, and the organic growth of the natural world. Organized thematically, rather than by chronology or media, the exhibition allows visitors to witness the evolution of Eshericks thinking around these primary design concepts.
This exhibition was originally conceived years ago as a small display of Eshericks woodblock prints from WEMs collection at the Brandywine Museum of Art, but the remarkable sweep of the artists cross-disciplinary creative brilliance quickly led to this more expansive examination, said Thomas Padon, the James H. Duff Director of the Brandywine Museum of Art. In a partnership forged over years of visits to the Wharton Esherick home and studio, conversations and deliberations, and marveling together over the artists work, Brandywine and our superb colleagues at WEM developed plans for this long overdue reassessment of Eshericks contributions to American art. WEMs Executive Director, Julie Siglin, added, "Esherick engaged with the world in a collaborative way; likewise, this exhibition has been a fundamentally collaborative effort from the start. WEM is thrilled to share Esherick's legacy more broadly with the world through this exciting partnership with the Brandywine."
Although The Crafted World is not a comprehensive retrospective of the artists career, the exhibition uses WEMs significant collection, made up largely of the works Esherick surrounded himself with, to highlight his integrated approach to living and artmaking. Visitors to The Crafted World will be introduced to the artists singular voice, creativity and skill in a way that recontextualizes the objects with innovative thematic approaches to his work, said Amanda Burdan, Senior Curator at the Brandywine, who provided organizational and curatorial guidance and coordination for the exhibition. Works on view will explore Eshericks intimate connection to the natural world and its materials, his skillful design approach and problem solving, interest in performance and the body, fascination with the natural world, enduring imaginative spirit, and even his wry sense of humor.
The Crafted World is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by Rizzoli Electa. In addition to an essay by Zilber, this major publication includes contributions by Sarah Archer, a design and culture writer based in Philadelphia; Colin Fanning, Assistant Curator of European Decorative Arts at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; Ann Glasscock, Associate Curator and Decorative Arts Specialist at the Taft Museum of Art; Holly Gore, WEMs Director of Interpretation and Associate Curator of Special Collections; and photography by Joshua McHugh, a renowned New Yorkbased photographer who specializes in interior, architecture and design.
Following its presentation in Chadds Ford at the Brandywine, The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick will travel to the Chazen Museum of Art in Madison, Wisconsin, and the Taft Museum of Art in Cincinnati, Ohio.