Samuel Cashwan

Samuel Adolph Cashwan (1900 - 1988) was an American sculptor.

Contents

History

Cashwan was born to Jewish parents in Cherkasy, Ukraine, Russian Empire. His parents left Russia and emigrated to New York City in 1906. Cashwan began his art studies after the family moved to Detroit in 1916. His first exposure came from his art teacher, Katherine Conover at Detroit's Central High School. He followed this by taking instruction at the John Wicker School followed by courses at the Detroit City College.

1918 found him serving in the US Army. He was discharged following the end of the war and returned to New York City where he continued with his art training at the Architectural League of New York. This was followed by an extended stay in Paris from 1923 to 1926 where he attended the Ecole des Beaux-Arts under the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle He returned from France and moved back to Detroit, Michigan in 1927. There Cashwan obtained a position as an art instructor at the University of Michigan. He also served as the head of the sculpture department of the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts from his arrival in Michigan until 1942. Later he also was employed by the WPA [Works Progress Administration] from 1936 until 1942 as the supervisor of its sculpture and ceramics program. He was to credit these teaching positions, and the income derived from them with creating the financial security that allowed him to pursue his own art as he saw fit, rather than being hampered by the demands of the market. In 1942 he presented work in MOMA in a show called Americans, 1942.

Following the end of WW2 Cashwan was hired as a designer for General Motors, a position that he held until his retirement in 1965. He moved to North Carolina shortly thereafter, where he lived until his passing in 1988.

While Cashwan suggested that his work had been influenced by both Romanesque and Hindu sculpture, as his career progress his work developed along more and more abstract lines. By the late 1930s his figural work had become very angular, stressing sharp lines and large volumes. His pieces created following the Second War were even more abstract, his later ones having altogether abandoned figural reference.

Like many of the sculptors of his day Cashwan was endowed with both the skills and the opportunity to work with architects and create architectural sculpture. Buildings adorned by his hand can be found in both Lansing and Detroit Michigan.

Architectural Work

Public Monuments

References

External links

Official Samuel Cashwan Website

Brady Memorial

Clare Pioneer Women

Samuel Smith Flagpole

Willoughby Miller Memorial