CORNWALL, Conn.—The Cornwall Library will open “Verisimilitude,” a selection of studies, reliefs, busts, portraits, nudes and maquettes (small preliminary models) by sculptor Neil Estern (1926-2019) on Sept. 13, with an opening reception from 5 to 7 p.m.

Neil Estern’s seated statue of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his dog, Fall, at the FDR Memorial in Washington, DC. Photo contributed

The show will continue through Nov. 1. 

Perhaps his best-known sculpture is the nearly 9-foot statue of a seated, caped FDR at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington D.C. The memorial also features his statues of Eleanor Roosevelt and the president’s beloved terrier, Fala.

Although he worked during a period in which abstracted and exaggerated depictions of the body were the accepted norm in the art world, Estern’s work remained firmly connected to classical realism—verisimilitude—and the monumental sculptors who profoundly influenced him.

Advertisements

Estern acknowledged that his work was also influenced to a “subtle, unconscious” degree by his personal feelings about the subject. When Life magazine commissioned him to illustrate a cover story about J. Edgar Hoover titled “The Emperor of the FBI,” Estern represented Hoover as a Roman potentate carved in marble.

“It was a caricature and emphasized a bit of what I thought was his evil side,” he said.

“There are some innate elements, some vibrations that a person is sending out that I absorb and want to get into the sculpture. Something below the surface is going to make that piece of sculpture unique.”

His public works, mostly cast in bronze and displayed in prominent venues, include (in addition to those mentioned above) sculptures of Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, Frederick Law Olmsted, Calvert Vaux, Irving Berlin, and John F. Kennedy. His bust of Jimmy Carter was on the cover of Time magazine.

Neil Estern working on the hands of the Roosevelt sculpture. Photo contributed

He also created many intimate portraits of friends and family, nudes and other smaller works.

Estern graduated from the Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University. After graduation he began to make dolls, notably the Patti Playpal line for Ideal Toys, for which his wife created the wardrobe. 

Within a few years, this financial success enabled him to turn from dollmaker to full-time sculptor, working out of a studio in Brooklyn Heights, a foundry in a medieval town of expatriate artists in Northern Italy and, for his last decades, at his beloved studio in rural West Cornwall.

Estern’s children, filmmaker Tory Estern Jadow, and cinematographer Evan Estern, curated the show.

Their selection of objects includes pieces for purchase, with part of the proceeds benefitting the library.

Registration is requested for the reception by calling 860-672-6874.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.