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A work made of graphite and black pencil, with stumping and erasing, on ivory wove paper, laid down on off-white wove paper.

Nude Torso

c. 1920

Charles Sheeler American, 1883-1965

United States

A painter, photographer, printmaker, and draftsman, Charles Sheeler became the major exponent of Precisionism, a style that employed clean-cut lines, simple forms, and sharp focus. He was part of the New York avant-garde art world that also included Charles Demuth and others associated with Alfred Stieglitz. In his quest for elegant simplification, Sheeler was drawn to a wide variety of sources, from Shaker artifacts to modern industrial architecture. His keen eye and delicate touch oscillate between realism and abstraction in this depiction of a section of a woman’s torso.

Graphite and black pencil, with stumping and erasing, on ivory wove paper, laid down on off-white wove paper

Prints and Drawings