The Very Strong Man

Eugenie Gershoy, The Very Strong Man, 1936-1940, polychromed dextrine, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Erwin P. Vollmer, 1985.6
Copied Eugenie Gershoy, The Very Strong Man, 1936-1940, polychromed dextrine, 2313 789 58 in. (58.435.224.5 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Erwin P. Vollmer, 1985.6

Artwork Details

Title
The Very Strong Man
Date
1936-1940
Dimensions
2313 789 58 in. (58.435.224.5 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of Erwin P. Vollmer
Mediums
Mediums Description
polychromed dextrine
Classifications
Keywords
  • Figure male
  • Fantasy
  • Animal — elephant
  • Performing arts — circus — strong man
Object Number
1985.6

Artwork Description

During the late 1930s, Eugenie Gershoy began working for the Works Progress Administration in New York. A friend of hers, the artist Max Spivak, was designing a series of murals for a children’s library in Astoria, Long Island. Gershoy decided to create colorful figurines to go along with Spivak’s paintings. These sculptures depicted circus characters posed in a variety of impossible feats, including the figures in Ill-Fated Toreador, who dangles precariously from a bull’s horn, and The Very Strong Man, who lifts an elephant above his head while balancing on one toe. The library was so pleased with the work of Gershoy and Spivak, they rebuilt the space into an oval to emphasize the circus setting.