$8,190
Estimate: $5,000 - $7,000
Auction: May 18, 2023 12:00 PM EDT
American black walnut
Carved signature and date: "J. Camp '77"
Provenance
Commissioned directly from James Camp
Property from a Private Pennsylvania Collection
Note
James Monroe Camp (American 1930-2008) was a self-taught, African-American artist who began working in wood to fill what he called "a need for self-expression." After serving as a drill sergeant in the Korean War, Mr. Camp moved to Camden, New Jersey where he opened his first woodworking studio in 1963, after a brief career as an electrician at RCA. He moved operations to Philadelphia in 1967, opening his eponymous studio, J. Camp Designs, at 20th and Sansom Street. Camp was well-known in Philadelphia craft circles and beyond, purportedly earning commissions from the likes of Hollywood superstars Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., and John Wayne. It's unknown how many furniture and woodworking commissions Camp received, but the great pride he took with his creations (they are almost always effusively signed), the small size of his studio, and the rarity with which his work appears on the secondary market, suggests that he was likely working alone and produced a modest output over his career. Camp's brand of organic modernism is expressed through heavily carved, massive forms in laminated or solid walnut with simple joinery and echoes the influence of fellow East coast woodworkers like Wendell Castle. This generation of woodworkers pushed furniture to the forefront of the American craft movement, which by 1972 was solidly canonized with the opening of the Smithsonian's Renwick Gallery, and its inaugural exhibition "Wooden Works: Furniture Objects by Five Contemporary Craftsmen."
This lot is sold with a digital copy of the original preparatory drawing from J. Camp designs.