Description: A Sheridan Oman framed baby Cottonwood signed etching. The image measures 6" x 5". I have more listed by this artist. I will combine shipping. Feel free to ask questions. Oman's biography below includes the mysterious circumstances of his and his second wife's death. Printmaker, painter, and sculptor Sheridan Winslow Oman was born on October 20, 1926, on a farm in Hightstown, New Jersey, to Milton and Norma Oman. He grew up in Monroe, N.J., where he married his first wife, Marjorie Thompson, in 1946. He studied art under George Grosz and Kenneth Hayes Miller at the Art Students League in New York City, and for two years, he worked at the Bronx Zoo as a staff artist. In the early 1970s, he remarried and moved to Tucson, Arizona, with his second wife, Pearl, who was a painter. For eleven years, Oman worked as a keeper in the bird section of the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and then, in New York, as a staff artist, creating various works in different mediums that featured local wildlife. He also illustrated wildlife guides, including Animal Kitabu (1968, Elek Books, Jean-Pierre Hallet); The Easy Field Guide to Common Desert Mammals of Arizona (1976, Tecolote Press, Dick and Sharon Nelson); and Birds at a Glance (1984, Van Nostrand Reinhold, Blachly, Jenks, Oman). Towards the end of their lives, Sheridan and Pearl Oman resided at the edge of Tucson in the desert. They became known as reclusive artists who had little contact with society but continued to work on their paintings and prints from home. Oman did the entire printing process for his etchings, from working on the original plate to hand-pulling each of the prints on his press. Most of his subjects are North American mammals and birds. Unfortunately, the end of the Omans' lives is shrouded in tragedy. In March of 1995, the body of Pearl and that of the Omans' cat were found in their home with gunshot wounds, and Sheridan Oman had disappeared into the forest, never to be seen again, though several notes were left behind to indicate what he wanted to be done with their property. Some sources have suggested that Pearl may have had an incurable ailment and that Sheridan acted out of mercy and grief - unsubstantiated claims that nevertheless made more sense to those who knew him and described him as gentle and kind. Sheridan Oman is officially listed as having died on January 6, 1997, in Pima County, Arizona, although his body was never recovered. Various homages to Sheridan Oman on behalf of his life and work have occurred in recent years. In 2013, an extensive exhibition of his work, including paintings, prints, drawings, and sculptures, was held by the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum (ASDM) and its Art Institute, complete with a catalogue of his works titled In Search of Sheridan Oman: The Art of a Desert Recluse. Of his work, the director of the museum noted: "...Sheridan Oman's...medium was art, but [his] language was nature. He demonstrated a deep understanding of the natural world and a longing to present this to others so they could come to know it as he had." - Craig Ivanyi, director, ASDM. In 2019, the Mirror Vision Ensemble performed an operatic tribute to the artist, written by composer Francine Trester and inspired by Oman's wildlife etchings, which was performed at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA. Oman's work is included in the J. Frank Dobie collection at the University of Texas, Austin, and the Mulvane Art Museum at Washburn University, Kansas.
Price: 225 USD
Location: Greer, South Carolina
End Time: 2025-01-22T21:01:30.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Sheridan Oman
Theme: Animals
Material: Paper
Framing: Framed
Production Technique: Etching
Region of Origin: Arizona, USA
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Subject: Rabbits