Lot Details & Additional Photographs
1951, patinated bronze, inscribed signature and date to triceps, mounted atop a stone base with additional inscriptions and brass artist plaque.
21 1/2 x 7 1/2 x 7 in.
From the Estate of the late Robin Satinsky, Donglomur, Villanova, Pennsylvania Literature: Joe Brown: Retrospective Catalog 1932-1966, illustration no. 40-42.
Sculptor Joe Brown had a fascinating life as an athlete, coach, artist and professor. He is best known for his bronze works depicting athletes. Joe grew up in Gray's Ferry as a Jewish family in an Irish neighborhood. After graduating South Philadelphia High, Joe enrolled at Temple where he played varsity football and was also on the boxing team. Joe's brother Harry boxed at the professional level, and like his bother Joe too turned professional as a pugilist, earning a 9-0 record before leaving the sport. Afterward, Joe found part-time work as a model at a sculpture class at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, inspiring him to create his own sculptural works. With the encouragement of Dr. R. Tait McKenzie and others, he would go on to have a successful career creating impressive bronze works of sport related scenes. Joe Brown describes the motivation behind his works: "I have insisted strength and sensitivity can exist together. The contemporary image of man as an absurdity is one that I reject. Fallibility and absurdity are synonymous. Our world, surely, is not one of sweetness and light, but just as surely its is not one of darkness and doom. I think we come closer to the truth to say
It's so good it's a shame it isn't better-but it won't be better if we stop trying."
Princeton University hired Joe as a boxing coach and later as a sculpture professor for four decades. Brown had several large commissions, including pieces for Veteran's Stadium, Temple University, and others.
Good estate condition; stone base with minor edge chips.