Helen Beling PRICE CHARTS
1914 New York City - 2001. Known for: Abstract figure sculpture.
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The following text is The New York Times obituary of the artist, March 15, 2001. Helen Beling worked in various nonobjective styles, beginning with her early wood carvings, which evoked shrouded... Read full biography
The following text is The New York Times obituary of the artist, March 15, 2001. Helen Beling worked in various nonobjective styles, beginning with her early wood carvings, which evoked shrouded medieval German figures. She eventually worked in stone, bronze and steel before developing an amalgam... Read full biography
The following text is The New York Times obituary of the artist, March 15, 2001. Helen Beling worked in various nonobjective styles, beginning with her early wood carvings, which evoked shrouded medieval German figures. She eventually worked in stone, bronze and steel before developing an amalgam of fiberglass, reinforced resin and bronze powder, which allowed her to create large bronze sculptures that weighed very little. Her work has been exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and at the... Read full biography
The following text is The New York Times obituary of the artist, March 15, 2001. Helen Beling worked in various nonobjective styles, beginning with her early wood carvings, which evoked shrouded medieval German figures. She eventually worked in stone, bronze and steel before developing an amalgam of fiberglass, reinforced resin and bronze powder, which allowed her to create large bronze sculptures that weighed very little. Her work has been exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and at the Whitney Museum of American Art and is in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington. Several of her sculptures were commissioned by synagogues, including a 26-foot-long Exodus for Temple Emanu-El in Yonkers, N.Y.... Read full biography
The following text is The New York Times obituary of the artist, March 15, 2001. Helen Beling worked in various nonobjective styles, beginning with her early wood carvings, which evoked shrouded medieval German figures. She eventually worked in stone, bronze and steel before developing an amalgam of fiberglass, reinforced resin and bronze powder, which allowed her to create large bronze sculptures that weighed very little. Her work has been exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and at the Whitney Museum of American Art and is in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington. Several of her sculptures were commissioned by synagogues, including a 26-foot-long Exodus for Temple Emanu-El in Yonkers, N.Y.... Read full biography
Helen Beling - Charts
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