Phillip Callahan Oil Painting of Stylized Figures
Item Details
An oil painting on canvas by American painter Phillip Callahan (1918-1991). This piece depicts brightly colored figures abstracted in a Cubist fashion. The subjects include a blue man with a horse head, a woman whose dress is open and revealing her beasts, and other characters. It has a stamped signature to the lower right corner, a stamp from the estate of the artist on the verso, and is presented as an unstretched canvas.
Phillip Callahan was born in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1918. By the age of eighteen his work had been exhibited in several galleries throughout New York. Callahan received his formal artistic training at the Worcester Institute of Fine Art in 1937 as well as the Advanced School of the Boston Museum of Fine Art. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris before World War II broke out. Callahan enlisted in the United States Army in February of 1941. After the war he returned to the United States and began studying at the Art Students League of New York. It was during this time that Callahan studied under Czech-American modernist painter, Vaclav Vytlacil (1892-1984). Callahan’s earlier works, remained ultimately realistic with slight abstraction. However, after studying in New York and Europe his work started to become abstraction. By the 1950s and 1960s his work became completely non-objective.
Condition
- abrasions throughout canvas with significant areas of paint loss particularly to lower right; fraying to edges of canvas; nail holes from previous stretching; two 1" square holes to canvas at upper right with tears to near edges.
Dimensions
- measures canvas.
Item #
17IND158-047