Artist

Tage Frid

born Copenhagen, Denmark 1915-died Newport, RI 2004
Also known as
  • Tage P. Frid
Born
Copenhagen, Denmark
Died
Newport, Rhode Island, United States

Works by this artist (151 items)

Chiura Obata, El Capitán, 1931, color woodcut on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Obata Family, 2000.76.24, © 1989, Lillian Yuri Kodani
El Capitán
Date1931
color woodcut on paper
Not on view
Chiura Obata, Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.48), 1929-1930, color woodcut on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Obata Family, 2005.17.50, © 1989, Yuri Kodani
Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.48)
Date1929-1930
color woodcut on paper
Not on view
Chiura Obata, Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.43), 1929-1930, color woodcut on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Obata Family, 2005.17.45, © 1989, Yuri Kodani
Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.43)
Date1929-1930
color woodcut on paper
Not on view
Chiura Obata, Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.32), 1929-1930, color woodcut on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Obata Family, 2005.17.34, © 1989, Yuri Kodani
Evening at Carl Inn (progressive proof No.32)
Date1929-1930
color woodcut on paper
Not on view

Related Books

studio_500.jpg
Studio Furniture
The eighty-four pieces of studio furniture owned by the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum constitute one of the largest assemblages of American studio furniture in the nation. Three former administrators—Lloyd Herman, Michael Monroe, and Kenneth Trapp—amassed a seminal collection that samples studio furniture’s great diversity. From the carefully crafted stools of Tage Frid to the art deco chest painted by Rob Womack, from the one-of-a-kind Ghost Clock sculpture by Wendell Castle to the limited production stool by David Ebner, the collection highlights the astonishing variety of the American studio furniture movement.