Skip to content

Sculpture of an African American woman’s head by Fred Press

Posted in Art

The black sculpted head was almost lost among the pile of stuff on the auction table. Maybe that’s why I had walked right past it during my first preview of items that were hours away from being auctioned.

It appeared to be the head of a black man. The artist had fashioned the lips in the shape and size that had commonly been used to represent black men – thick and full. Based on the cut of the hair and an element on the back of the head, the man could have been African or African American. I later learned from a reader that it was actually the head of a woman with a bun in the back.

The head seemed to be made of plaster and painted black. Flecks of white could be seen in tiny spots where the sculpture had been nicked and chipped.

Fred Presser African head sculpture
A close-up view of the Fred Press head sculpture.

It appeared to be old rather than contemporary, and I wondered who had created it. So I turned the head, which wasn’t very heavy, first to the bottom and then the sides. The artist’s name was slightly hidden under a small recess on one side:

Fred Press.

I didn’t recognize the name, so I Googled for a quick identification and found that he was a 20th century American artist. I also came across another copy of the auction sculpture. That was not unusual, I learned later, because Press and his brother sold plaster reproductions of his sculptures through a company they founded in the 1930s called Contemporary Arts Inc. in Boston (where he was born).

Press’ sculpture of the man, titled “Slave,” won first prize at the Delgado Museum of Art (now the New Orleans Museum of Art) in 1946.

Most noted for his sculptures, Press was also a painter, illustrator, portraitist, designer and commercial artist. He was born in Boston in 1919 of Russian parents who had immigrated to the United States in the preceding decade, according a website devoted to him and his work. As a teenager in the 1930s, he won awards for four years in the Proctor and Gamble Soap Sculpture Competition. He studied at an art school in Boston where he later taught.

Fred Presser African head sculpture
The full face and back of the Fred Presser female head sculpture.

In the Air Force during World War II, he was stationed in Panama where he edited the Sixth Air Force’s official publication called the Caribbean Breeze. The publication told of the culture and history of the area. In the 1950s he designed glassware and other giftware at a company on Fifth Avenue.

During the 1990s, he created two of the bronze bas-reliefs at the U.S. Navy Memorial in Washington under a commission from the Navy.

Press exhibited in single and group exhibitions, and his works are in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Worcester Art Museum in Worcester, MA, and other museums.

He died in 2012 at age 92.

Fred Presser African head sculpture
Fred Presser’s name on the head sculpture.

I found several reproductions of the head sculpture on the web. The male and female were offered as a pair last year at an auction in New York, which identified them as African men with tribal headdress and made in the mid-20th century. They did not sell, despite their $75 starting bid. Others were offered on retail sites for up to $1,200, and one sold for $695. Another went unsold on eBay for $350.

I didn’t get a chance to bid or leave a bid on the sculpture because I was flustered and disappointed early on after losing out on some African American photographs I desperately wanted – and I summarily forgot about the piece. I suspect that it did not sell for my kind of price because it had been sculpted by a listed artist and because “black” sells very well at auction these days.

3 Comments

  1. Marie
    Marie

    Hi. I came across your article and I just wanted to make a couple of comments… The artist’s name is actually Fred Press, not Presser, as it states in the title.
    Also, believe it or not, your sculpture posted here is of an African WOMAN not a man! I know it’s hard to tell, but it’s much easier to see when it is placed next to the other sculpture it is meant to be paired with – they were made in 1945 and are “Slace Man” and “Slave Woman”. The slave man sculpture is bald, and if you look carefully at this one, you can see that the hair comes together into a stylized bun in the very back. Their faces are extremely similar.
    By the way, the white material you mentioned it being made from us most likely plaster, which is generally what the copies they put out were made of (the originals were bronze).
    Thanks!

    March 20, 2018
    |Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *