Herbert Ferber


Herbert Ferber was an American Abstract Expressionist, sculptor and painter, and a "driving force of the New York School."

Background

Herbert Ferber Silvers was born on April 30, 1906, in New York City. In 1923, he began studies in both sciences and humanities at the College of the City of New York from; in 1927, he received a BS from jointly from CCNY and Columbia University. In 1927, he took night classes in sculpture through 1930 at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design and then studied for six months at the National Academy of Design. That summer, he that summer he was awarded a scholarship to work at The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation in Oyster Bay, New York. In 1930, he graduated in oral and dental surgery at Columbia.

Career

Ferber practiced dentistry and taught part-time at the Columbia Dental School during the 1930s; he continued to sculpt and practice dentistry up through the 1950s. William Zorach and Julio Gonzales influenced Ferber in forming the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors as a spin-off of the Communist-aligned American Artists' Congress.
In 1940, Ferber changed his approach to sculpture from carving to gluing and doweling; he last worked in wood in 1944. Ferber came under the influence of Henry Moore. In 1945, Ferber began experimenting in steel-reinforced concrete, abstract sculpture, and metal-soldering. Starting in 1946, he associated with Abstract Expressionist painters, frequented Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century, and became more interested in Surrealism.
In the 1950s, Ferber began creating "roofed" and "caged" sculpture. In 1952, Ferber completed a commission for the facade of the Congregation B'nai Israel; the result was the relief sculpture "Titled And the bush was not consumed." In 1956, Ferber joined artists who protested a curvilinear slope of Frank Lloyd Wright's planned building for the Guggenheim Museum. Throughout the 1950s, Ferber lectured on and exhibited metal sculpture and site-specific sculpture.
In 1961, for the Whitney Museum of American Art, he created one of the first indoor environmental installations, "Titled Sculpture as Environment," a fiberglass piece for an entire room with interior spaces to visit. His work as a teacher included visiting professorships at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Rutgers University, New Jersey.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Ferber worked on large, abstract forms and also returned to painting as well as painted sculpture.
In 1971, as guardian of Mark Rothko's daughter Kate, Ferber charged executors of the Mark Rothko estate of conspiring with the Marlborough Gallery to waste the estate's assets. An eight-month trial ended in October 1974, eventually leading to dismissal of executors and gallery, heavy fines, and appointment of Kate Rothko as executor. Remaining paintings went to her and brother Christopher Rothko; a foundation gave its share of the works to museums.

Personal life and death

Ferber married Sonia Stirt in 1932, Ilse Falk in 1944, and Edith Popiel in 1967, a photographer.
In 1968, Ferber stated:
I became an artist because I was interested in literature particularly and not primarily in painting and sculpture. But then, while at college, along with my interest in literature I developed an interest in the history of art... I never got beyond the Metropolitan and the Museum of Natural History... the "Tiffany Foundation where I met for the first time some other artists.
Herbert Ferber died age on August 20, 1991, of cancer of the bile at his summer home in Egremont, Massachusetts.

Awards

According to the Herbert Ferber Estate, awards to Ferber have included:
Ferber received numerous commissions for synagogues, e.g., a candelabrum and altar decoration for the chapel of Brandeis University. Other commissions include: a copper sculpture for the John F. Kennedy Office Building in Boston, an environmental sculpture for Rutgers University, and a steel sculpture for the American Dental Association Building in Chicago.
According to the Herbert Ferber Estate, commissions to Ferber have included:
In 1978, Ferber appeared in Masters of Modern Sculpture, Part Three, by Michael Blackwood.
At his death in 1991, the New York Times said:
Mr. Ferber was one of a small group of American sculptors who in the 1940's began to break with the traditional notion of sculpture as a solid, closed mass. He made open, airy forms that, as he put it, "pierced" space rather than displaced it, and he is credited with creating, in 1960, one of the first environmental sculptures intended for people to walk through... Mr. Ferber was also an accomplished painter, his canvases taking the form of sculpturelike reliefs on which he painted abstract motifs."
In 2019, the Wall Street Journal noted:
In 1949, Clement Greenberg counted Ferber, along with Isamu Noguchi and Smith, among a handful of "sculptor-constructors who have a chance... to contribute something ambitious, serious and original" to what he recognized as an important "new genre" of American metal sculpture.
Ferber and his wife appear in accounts of New York circles, including Writings on Art by Mark Rothko and The World in My Kitchen, written by Colette Rossant, whose husband was architect and painter James Rossant.
According to the Oxford Reference Dictionary:
Among the earliest artists to produce an abstract expressionist form of sculpture, from the late 1940s he drew on constructivist and surrealist precedents to achieve vigorous, almost gestural welded abstractions. In time, his work evolved toward environmental sculpture, culminating during the 1960s in room-size installations of abstract form... An observer venturing into such a room in effect entered the sculpture.

Works

Ferber's best-known sculptures are open, hollow forms in soldered and welded metal. While abstract, their titles and spiky forms often suggest forces in conflict. . By the mid-1950s, he began to create, what he called, roofed sculptures―some parts of which hung from the ceiling while other parts rose from the floor. These were followed by so-called cage works―large, boxy forms within which other forms were set. With, Ferber created an installation executed in fiberglass for a room at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, opening up the interior space of the work for the viewer to enter. In the 1970s, Ferber continued his exploration of abstract form, mostly in large-scale outdoor pieces.
Ferber's works have appeared the Metropolitan, the Modern, and Whitney museums in New York and in Europe. His longest-term art dealer was M. Knoedler & Co., who exhibited Ferber's last living show in September 1990.
Solo exhibitions:
According to the Herbert Ferber Estate, solo exhibitions have included:
Group exhibitions:
According to the Herbert Ferber Estate, group exhibitions have included:
Ferber's work also appeared at group exhibitions at the San Francisco Golden Gate International Exposition, New York World's Fair, the U.S. Pavilion at the World Fair in Brussels, and the Seattle World's Fair.
Permanent collections:
Public collections holding works by Herbert Ferber include:
Works online:
Books on Ferber: