Deborah Butterfield

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Deborah Kay Butterfield (b. May 7, 1949) is an American artist currently living in Bozeman, Montana. She is best known for her sculptures of horses made from found objects, especially pieces of wood.

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[edit] Biographical Details

Born the same day as the 75th running of the Kentucky Derby, Butterfield partly credits her birthdate as an inspiration for her subject matter. However, she has also said that she preferred to work in the female form, but that her mentor Manuel Neri dominated that form. Thus, she chose to create self-portraits using images of horses. Gradually, the horses themselves became her primary theme.

Deborah earned a bachelors degree in 1971 and an M.F.A. in 1973 [[University of California, Davis].

[edit] Career

Butterfield's work has been exhibited widely and there is a great deal of demand among art collectors for her sculptures. She began crafting horses out of scrap metal and cast bronze in the early 1980s. She would sculpt a piece using wood and other materials fastened together with wire, then photograph the piece from all angles so as to be able to reassemble the piece in metal.

My work is not so overtly about movement. My horses' gestures are really quite quiet, because real horses move so much better than I could pretend to make things move. For the pieces I make, the gesture is really more within the body, it's like an internalized gesture, which is more about the content, the state of mind or of being at a given instant. And so it's more like a painting...the gesture and the movement is all pretty much contained within the body. - Deborah Butterfield

[edit] Public Installations

Seneca Park, Chicago, 1989

[edit] Links

Deborah Butterfield is represented by Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco, CA
Examples of Horse Sculptures
Artist's Biography and List of Exhibitions