London Jeans

Ernest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition Poster

Description: Ernest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition Poster Rare Original exhibition poster by Ernest Trova from an exhibition held at Pace Gallery in 1969. Serigraph printed on thick paper 26" x 27" Ernest Trova Ernest Tino Trova (February 19, 1927 – March 8, 2009) was a self-trained American surrealist and pop art painter and sculptor. Best known for his signature image and figure series, The Falling Man, Trova considered his entire output a single "work in progress." Trova used classic American comic character toys in some of his pieces because he admired their surrealism. Many of Trova's sculptures are cast in unusual white bronze. He began as a painter, progressing through three-dimensional constructions to his mature medium, sculpture. Trova's gift of forty of his works led to the opening of St. Louis County, Missouri's Laumeier Sculpture Park. Ernest T. Trova Born February 19, 1927 Clayton, Missouri, US Died March 8, 2009 (aged 82) Occupation(s) sculptor, painter Relatives Henry Hale Rand (father-in-law) Biography Trova was born on February 19, 1927, in Clayton, Missouri, where he attended Clayton High School and St. Louis University High School. His father, an industrial tool designer and inventor, died shortly after Trova graduated from high school. His interest in poetry led him to begin a correspondence with Ezra Pound, who had been confined to St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., after World War II. Trova lived in the St. Louis area his entire life. and has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. He worked at the Famous-Barr department store as a decorator and window dresser. A self-taught artist, Morton D. May, an art collector who later served as chairman of The May Department Stores Company (which owned the store he worked at), bought one of his paintings and contributed it to the Museum of Modern Art. As a 20-year-old, his painting Roman Boy, the first work he exhibited in his career, was awarded first prize in the Missouri Exhibition conducted at what was then known as the City Art Museum (now the St. Louis Art Museum). Roman Boy described as a provocative "sexually graphic work", alternatively "scandalized or energized" critics and the public, and earned the work a picture in Life magazine, earning him a degree of recognition that was unusual for an artist from St. Louis.[2] He started showing his art during the early years of the Pace Gallery, which later became "one of the most powerful art galleries in the world". Some of his first art was acquired by the collections of the Guggenheim Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, as well as by the St. Louis Art Museum in his hometown and by Tate in London. The Falling Man The Falling Man, 1969, at Laumeier Sculpture Park Created in 1964, The Falling Man, is Trova's best known work. His "Falling Man" series of works, "about man at his most imperfect", featured an armless human figure, that appeared in sculptures, paintings and prints. In an interview that year with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, he described the piece as "a personal hypothetical theory on the nature of man". Trova further stated that "I believe that man is first of all an imperfect creature. The first reaction I usually get to this is that I'm pessimistic. I don't think I am.... It's very close to many theories of man — the Catholic view that man is a fallen creature, for example." Trova created multiple versions of The Falling Man, including variant sculptures and wristwatches with images of the piece.[6] This led to charges of commercialism and critiques that the piece was period kitsch. An associate of Trova's rejected the criticism, noting that the duplicate works was an example of seriality, in which "Trova invented this great symbol of human fallibility through processing and reprocessing the image. Trova's work is misunderstood. Seriality is as essential to his work as it was to Warhol's. One of his earliest statements about 'Falling Man' was that all of it — all the sculptures, all the paintings, all the prints — were one work in his own mind." A major exhibit of Trova's works was presented in 1969 at the Pace Gallery, with reviewer Hilton Kramer of The New York Times calling it one whose size and scope "befits an artist currently enjoying a huge success". Kramer noted the recurrence of a theme in Trova's work, as exemplified by his Falling Man variations, stating that "All artists have a tendency to fall in love with their own symbols, and this is certainly the case with Mr. Trova". The exhibit included a "faceless, armless, polished, unsexed" symbolic figure that was presented in varying poses, and in a range of materials including chrome-plated bronze, enameled aluminum, marble and nickel Now covering 105 acres (42 ha), what is now known as Laumeier Sculpture Park opened to the public in 1975. Trova agreed to donate 40 of his large sculptures to help establish the park's collection of outdoor sculptures. Trova's dealer at the Pace Gallery approved of the arrangement, which were contributed upon a formal agreement signed on December 11, 1975. Despite his early successes, Trova's later constructivist abstract sculptures attracted little critical attention outside of St. Louis. A resident of Richmond Heights, Missouri, Trova died at age 82 on March 8, 2009, due to congestive heart failure. He had been married to Carla C. "Teddy" Rand, who came from the family that owned the International Shoe Company. As described by an art dealer who sold his works, Trova "never recovered from her death" in June 2008, "After she died, he just didn't last". He was survived by their three children

Price: 400 USD

Location: New York, New York

End Time: 2024-12-14T23:14:42.000Z

Shipping Cost: N/A USD

Product Images

Ernest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition PosterErnest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition PosterErnest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition PosterErnest Trova at Pace 32 East 57 New York Jan 4 - Feb 4, 1969 Exhibition Poster

Item Specifics

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)

Unit of Sale: Single Piece

Artist: Ernest Trova

Signed By: n/a

Size: 26” x 27”

Item Length: 27”

Region of Origin: New York, USA

Framing: Unframed

Personalize: No

Year of Production: 1969

Unit Type: Unit

Item Height: 27”

Style: Contemporary Art

Features: 1st Edition

Featured Person/Artist: Ernest Trova

Unit Quantity: 1

Culture: American

Item Width: 26”

Handmade: No

Character: n/a

Signed: No

Title: Ernest Trova. at Pace 1969

Material: Paper

Certificate of Authenticity (COA): No

Franchise: Ernest Trova

Original/Licensed Reprint: Original

Subject: Ernest Trova

California Prop 65 Warning: n/a

Type: Poster

COA Issued By: n/a

Theme: Art

Time Period Manufactured: 1960-1969

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Personalization Instructions: n/a

Recommended

AWESOME LARGE ERNEST TROVA EXHIBITION POSTER 1979 NOT FRAMED  SHIPPED IN TUBE
AWESOME LARGE ERNEST TROVA EXHIBITION POSTER 1979 NOT FRAMED SHIPPED IN TUBE

$100.00

View Details
Ernest Tino Trova, "After Personae", Screenprint, signed and numbered in pencil
Ernest Tino Trova, "After Personae", Screenprint, signed and numbered in pencil

$695.00

View Details
Ernest Trova FALLING MAN Pace 1969 print distressed
Ernest Trova FALLING MAN Pace 1969 print distressed

$150.01

View Details
Ernest Trova. Recent Works exhibition catalog St Louis. 1989 Samuels Gallery
Ernest Trova. Recent Works exhibition catalog St Louis. 1989 Samuels Gallery

$24.95

View Details
ERNEST TROVA Man is Only a Memory, 1969
ERNEST TROVA Man is Only a Memory, 1969

$250.00

View Details
Ernest TROVA Bird Man Stainless Steel Sculpture Figurine Modern Artwork
Ernest TROVA Bird Man Stainless Steel Sculpture Figurine Modern Artwork

$2900.00

View Details
ERNEST TROVA Falling Man/Perspective Shadow Man Large Serigraph Limited Edition
ERNEST TROVA Falling Man/Perspective Shadow Man Large Serigraph Limited Edition

$380.00

View Details
Vintage Ernest Trova Kaleidoscope Trovascope Museum of Modern Art Tube Case 1974
Vintage Ernest Trova Kaleidoscope Trovascope Museum of Modern Art Tube Case 1974

$29.99

View Details
Ernest Trova Falling Man Watch 1985 Offset Lithograph Print 24-1/4 x 20
Ernest Trova Falling Man Watch 1985 Offset Lithograph Print 24-1/4 x 20

$75.00

View Details
RARE 1971 St. Louis Post Dispatch Cover Ernest Trova Pop Art Sculpture Complete
RARE 1971 St. Louis Post Dispatch Cover Ernest Trova Pop Art Sculpture Complete

$30.00

View Details