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Mar 7, 2026
Evaline Clarke Sellors (Texas / Pennsylvania, 1903-1995), freestanding wooden bear sculpture, featured in her Retrospective in 1989, solid walnut wood
height 24 in. x width 10 in. x depth 11 in.
Provenance: Property from a collection in Fort Worth, Texas
Evaline Clarke Sellors was a Texas sculptor, ceramist, and educator who studied at Washington University in St. Louis and the St. Louis School of Fine Arts before enrolling at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where she trained under Charles Grafly and Albert Laessle. She twice received the William Emlen Cresson Traveling Scholarship, which allowed her to study sculpture in Europe. Known for her strong modeling skills, she first worked in realistic figurative sculpture and later moved toward simplified and abstracted forms, especially in her sculptures of birds, animals, and insects. She created major public commissions in the 1930s, including Art Deco bas-relief figures for Farrington Field in Fort Worth, and later designed stained glass for churches and public spaces. Sellors exhibited widely in regional and national shows, including the 1936 Texas Centennial Exposition, the 1939 New York World’s Fair, and exhibitions at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, and she had solo shows in Fort Worth. In 1976 she received a special award from the Texas Society of Architects for her contributions to the built environment. Her work is held in major Texas museum collections, including the Dallas Museum of Art and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
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