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David Esterly

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Photography by Edward C. Robison III
David Esterly
Photography by Edward C. Robison III

David Esterly

1944 - 2019
BiographyDavid Esterly’s carving has been called “some of the most astonishing work being done in wood today” (Fine Woodworking). It is in the tradition of Grinling Gibbons (1648-1721), whose spectacular cascades of flowers, fruits and foliage revolutionized ornamental sculpture during the age of Christopher Wren.

After the 1986 fire at Hampton Court Palace, Esterly was asked to step into the shoes of this long-dead master when he was commissioned to replace the seven foot-long Gibbons carving destroyed in the flames. At the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 1998-9 he curated the first ever Gibbons exhibition, and wrote the accompanying book, Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving. In 2002, as a guest artist at the American Academy in Rome, he produced the first of his Arcimboldesque heads.

The Hampton Court drop (shown here), together with his recent replacements for a damaged Gibbons-era carving at Winchester Cathedral, remain his only reproduction work. As the 18th century saying has it, ‘He who imitates the Iliad does not imitate Homer’. Instead Esterly seeks to reinvent the Gibbons tradition by discarding period conventions and evolving fresh compositions for the present age. Some of his carvings are designed for a particular architectural setting, but most are independent pieces of sculpture. In all he tries to push carving technique and the limewood (linden wood) medium to their highest potential. He works only on commission, for patrons in America, Britain, and Europe. [David Esterly, retrieved 5/29/2019, https://www.davidesterly.com/about-the-author/]
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