Apr 02, 2015 - Sale 2378

Sale 2378 - Lot 16

Unsold
Estimate: $ 10,000 - $ 15,000
LESLIE GARLAND BOLLING (1898 - 1955)
Beautiful Womanhood.

Poplar wood sculpture, 1931. Approximately 355 mm; 14 inches high. Incised "Leslie G. Bolling" on the back.

Provenance: aquired directly from the artist; James A. Porter (1934); thence by descent to his daughter, Constance Porter-Uzelac. James A. Porter purchased two sculptures from Bolling in 1934.

Exhibited: Freeing Art from Wood, Barbara C. Batson, The Library of Virginia, The University of Virginia, Richmond, 2006, pp. 82-83.

Leslie Garland Bolling was a largely self-taught artist whose carved figurative sculptures achieved national attention during his lifetime. Their inclusion in exhibitions by Carl Van Vechten, the Harmon Foundation and in James A. Porter's Modern Negro Art, published in 1943, helped establish him as an important sculptor. He had 4 works in the landmark Exhibition of Works by Negro Arts at the National Gallery of Washington, DC in 1929. Bolling used the same female model for both this sculpture and New Moon. Her full forms, carved with a pocket knife and left unpainted in both works, recall the work of Gaston Lachaise. Batson p. 19.