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Frog

Date1982
Artist Miles Burkholder Carpenter (1889 - 1985)
MediumCarved and painted wood
DimensionsOL. 12"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1996.701.1
Label TextMiles Carpenter was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, but in 1901, his father moved the entire family to the area of Waverly, Virginia, where he operated a sawmill. Eventually, Miles ran his own milling business and expanded into other ventures including an icehouse, an outdoor movie theater, and a roadside vegetable and fruit stand. He married Mary Elizabeth Stahl in 1915, and the couple had one son.

The onset of World War II slowed work at the mill, prompting Carpenter to begin creating decorative carvings out of odd bits of "leftover" wood. By 1942, the pace of his sawmill business had resumed, and it was not until 1955 that he again found time to whittle and paint for pleasure.

In 1960, Carpenter shaped and embellished a chunk of elmwood to resemble a giant watermelon, placing his creation on a hand cart and setting it beside his produce stand, occasionally propping it up on a wooden coca-cola crate as a seasonal advertisement. When passing through Waverly in 1972, a former curator of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum spied the melon and negotiated its purchase for the museum. Carpenter enjoyed describing the incredulous reactions of passing motorists who mistook his carving for real fruit.

After his wife's death in 1966, Carpenter turned increasingly to whittling and painting. Today he is known for a tremendous variety of imaginative carvings, including animals, biblical figures, politicians, monsters, and devils, many of them patently inspired and guided by the natural twists and turns of the roots and branches that were his raw materials.

ProvenanceIn 1982, the artist gave the piece to the family of Catherine Correll of Surry, Va., who was CWF's source.
Dog Figure 1981.701.1
1930-1935
D2006-CMD-759
1873
D2006-CMD-748
Probably 1860-1875
No image number on slide
Probably 1915-1930
No image number on slide
ca. 1900
2018.701.1, Figure
1880-1900
No image number on slide
1895-1900 (probably)