Arnold Geissbuhler
Arnold Geissbuhler was associated with some of the best-known artists of the 20th century, including Alberto Giacometti, Antoine Bourdelle, Otto Banninger, Edwin Dickinson, Massimo Campigli and Frederick Waugh. In 1914, Geissbuhler traveled to Zurich to become a sculptor's apprentice in the studio of Otto Munch. He attended the Kunst Gewerbe School and worked as Munch's assistant until 1919. In that year, Geissbuhler went to Paris to study with Antoine Bourdelle at the Academie Julian. He maintained a studio in Paris until 1927 when he traveled to the United States and married Elisabeth Chase, a Boston sculptor whom he met in Bourdelle's class. They moved to New England in 1933, and in 1937 he became an art instructor at Wellesley College. Geissbuhler's work is in the collection of Albright-Knox Museum, Harvard Art Museum, Boston Art Museum, Cape Cod Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Art and the Baltimore Museum of Art.
Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Pottery, Wood
2010s North American Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
2010s American Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Plaster, Wood, Paint, Resin, Foam
Mid-20th Century Belgian Mid-Century Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic, Canvas, Wood
1960s Belgian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
1960s Belgian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
Late 20th Century Swedish Scandinavian Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
21st Century and Contemporary American Post-Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
21st Century and Contemporary American Post-Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
1990s American Post-Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic, Wood
1970s American Vintage Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Ceramic
Mid-20th Century American Post-Modern Arnold Geissbuhler
Pottery