Fine Art Original abstract ink drawing by William Tarr and presented for sale for the first time by Spring Gallery/Modern Art Foundry. This study is done colored on drawing paper. Dimensions of the frame are 14 inches by 11.5 inches, with opening of mat measuring 9.5 x 7.5 inches. It is signed with his name "W Tarr '82" in ink, and also has "For Bob Spring". It is in excellent condition. It is presented in the photographs in a simple frame, but offered frameless. It will be mailed flat with acid free paper packaging. protective 1/2" foam core, and a Letter of Provenance will be provided after the sale. This was originally a gift to Bob Spring, the second generation  owner and manager of the foundry.

William Tarr, 1925-2011, grew up in the Bronx and enlisted in the Navy at 17 during World War II. He received training in meteorology and was assigned to a secret U.S. weather station in Siberia to help the Allies plan their invasion of Japan. Tarr's fascination with sculpture began with a pile of rotted wood from an old wharf shortly after he completed his military service in 1946. He created 17 pieces of artwork from the lumber. Early on he had done much to convert a former warehouse in SoHo into a sculpture studio and some-time living quarters. There were some amazing architectural feats that the sculptor/magician had performed, like the ramp that allowed him to park his motorcycle just inside the front doorway – a doorway so wide that it opened like the end of a gigantic ferry boat to allow enormous steel sculptures to be moved freely with pulley and lever systems onto waiting flatbed trucks. The first sculpture he ever exhibited was at New York City's Whitney Museum of American Art in 1962. One of Tarr's works was among six pieces purchased by the Ford Foundation, which donated Tarr's work to the Art Institute of Chicago, now part of their permanent collection. The self-taught sculptor, who worked mainly in welded metals but also with wood, concrete, fiberglass and cast bronze, was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 1974. His massive memorial to Dr. King stands across from the Lincoln Center in NYC. The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., displays his 5,900-pound bronze casting "Gates of Hell," also known as the "Gates of the Six Million." Tarr's fascination with magic since the age of 10 also led him to create several magic tricks and to write how-to books on magic.

 

Mr. Spring recalls this print being a gift from the artist in gratitude for all the innovation required by the foundry in doing the direct cast for the monumental "Gates of Hell" that was created for the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. He recalls his other most famous piece as the welded steel geometric memorial to Martin Luther King at the Jr. High School named after Dr. King, located across from the Lincoln Center in NYC. He had a place in the Hamptons, and was friends with Pollock and de Koonig.

 

  • Fine Art original ink abstract drawing by William Tarr, mat measuring 14" x by 11", interior opening 9.5" x 7.5"
  • Drawing pen on drawing paper
  • Signed in pen, dated "82"
  • Excellent condition
  • Letter of Provenance provided by Robert J. Spring Trust

Please sign up for our store newsletter!
To do this, click on "Visit Store", and then once you are in, in the top right corner, you can click on "Sign up for Seller Newsletter" and follow the simple prompt and you'll be all set.