Margaret Brassler Kane (May 25, 1909 – April 10, 2006) was an American figurative sculptor known for her use of the direct-carving method.[1][2]
Brassler Kane was born to parents Hans and Mathilde Trumpler Brassler in East Orange, New Jersey, and moved with her parents to Brooklyn in 1918.[3] She attended Packer Collegiate Institute, Syracuse University, and the Art Students League of New York, as well as took lessons with John Hovannes.[3] She won a number of prizes for her art during the 1940s. Many of her pieces depicted contemporary life and tackled current issues of the day, including socioeconomic injustice and war.[4][5] Brassler Kane was married to Arthur Ferris Kane in June 1930.[3][5]
One of Brassler Kane's best-known works is a group of large relief panels carved in limewood, each six by six feet: Symbols of Changing Man (1937–39), Earthbound (1950–57), and Micro-Macrocosm (1960–67).[3] The panels depict the history of humanity, exploring themes of science, technology, industry, religion, and social conflict.[1][2][6] However, until 2018, all of the panels had never been exhibited together.[2]Blackout, which shows a family of refugees fleeing from war, was exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1942 in a contemporary art show entitled "Artists for Victory."[7]Bread and Wine (1940) is a bronze work that contrasts impoverished figures on a Great Depression-era breadline with well-off bargoers mingling over cocktails.[5][6]Harlem Dancers (1937), carved in Tennessee marble, is in the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[8]
^ abcdBennewitz, Kathelene Motes (2008). Carved with Rasps and Chisels: The Sculpture of Margaret Brassler Kane (1909-2006). Cos Cob, CT: The Historical Society of the Town of Greenwich. pp. 32–35. OCLC287028570.