168
168
1987
enamel on aluminum 51 h × 71½ w in (130 × 182 cm)
enamel on aluminum 51 h × 71½ w in (130 × 182 cm)
estimate: $20,000–30,000
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This work is unique.
provenance: Union Station, Hartford, CT | Private Collection
In 1987, Robert Cottingham was commissioned by the Connecticut Bank and Trust Co. to create a series of unique works depicting American railroad imagery. These twelve panels feature historical railroad company logos, or heralds as they are referred to in railroad jargon, that were installed in Union Station in Hartford, Connecticut for nearly 30 years. The series marked Cottingham’s first and only public commission.
Robert Cottingham b. 1935
Born in 1935, Robert Cottingham is a painter and printmaker whose body of work finds inspiration in the urban American landscape. After graduation from the Pratt Institute in 1963, he began his advertising career in Los Angeles. He ultimately left the field to pursue painting, but the influence of the ad world can be seen in the execution of his work.
Although regarded as a Photorealist, Cottingham maintains that he is a realist painter working in a long tradition of Americana painters. His subjects range from mid-20th century commercial signage and architectural details to railroad boxcars and storefront marquees. An interest in typography is seen through the isolation of words and letter forms cropped into photo-realistic, dynamic compositions.
Cottingham’s work is among many of the most important collections both in the United States and Europe including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Tate Gallery in London, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago. His work has been exhibited in the Centre national d’art contemporain in Paris, Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. He lives and works in Connecticut.
Auction Results Robert Cottingham