J. WALLACE KELLY

"PIERROT"

LIMESTONE WITH PATINA, SIGNED

AMERICAN, DATED 1925

21 INCHES

J. Wallace Kelly

1894-1976

His first years of training occurred at the progressive Public School of Industrial Art, which existed briefly from 1880 to 1916 under the direction of J. Liberty Tadd and Charles Godfrey Leland.

At the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, J. Wallace Kelly studied sculpture under Charles Grafly.

After World War I, Kelly resumed his studies at the Academy, receiving two Cresson Traveling Scholarships.

He received his first scholarship in 1919 that enabled him to study with sculptor Emile Antoine Bourdelle in Paris, where he also exhibited at the Salon d'Autumne in 1921.

Kelly worked with fellow Academy student, Raphael Sabatini and architect Ralph Bencker on the N.W. Ayer Building in Philadelphia.

He created several sculptures for the Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Exposition in 1926 and five terra cotta reliefs for the United States Government's Central Heating Plant in Washington D.C. During the 1930s, like many artists, he joined the Works Progress Administration as the supervisor of sculpture projects for the state of Pennsylvania.

The Fairmount Park Art Association awarded Kelly commissions to create outdoor sculptures along East River Drive in Fairmount Park and the west entrance to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Kelly also taught sculpture at Haverford Friends School, Haverford College, the Chester County Art Center, and the Main Line Center for the Arts.