publications American Art
  • Overview


  • Selected Titles

  • African, Oceanic, and New World Cultures
  • American Art
  • Ancient Art
  • Architecture and Design
  • Asian and Southeast Asian Art
  • Contemporary Art
  • European Painting and Sculpture
  • European Prints and Drawings

By Suzanne Ramljak with Avis Berman, Valerie J. Fletcher, Klaus Kertess, and Cynthia Nadelman
Published in 2001 by the AFA
134 pages, 176 illus. (70 in color, 106 halftones),
10 × 11 ½ in.
Hardcover • ISBN 1-88544421-4 • $29.95 (AFA)

This richly illustrated catalogue focuses on the figural sculpture of Elie Nadelman (1882–1946), reappraising the artist's distinct position within twentieth-century American sculpture. It details the artist's years in the United States (1914–46), when he merged classical and folk art sources to create a unique fusion of past and present, traditional and modern, and high and low. The essays provide multiple perspectives on Nadelman's art. Curator Suzanne Ramljak examines Nadelman's achievements in the classical figural tradition, while an essay by Avis Berman explores the artist's involvement with folk art. Klaus Kertess writes on Nadelman's late plasters, and Valerie Fletcher focuses on the materials and working processes of the artist. Finally, the text is complemented by an illustrated chronology of the artist's biography with artistic milieus by Cynthia Nadelman, the artist's biographer and granddaughter.