Description: "Quick Flight Gambel Quail," etching,
pencil signed l/r, inscribed l/l 26/100,
7.75" x 9.75" plate, 14" x
16" mat.
Condition: Excellent.
Biography: Walter E. Bohl's beginning in art proves
the saying about clouds and silver
linings.
In 1930 he was working for the
Illinois Bell
Telephone Company in Chicago
when he became
seriously ill and had to leave
his work.
During a long convalescence he
began making
pen-and-ink drawings to pass
the time. His
natural subjects were birds,
animals, and
outdoor scenes because ever since
his boyhood
in Columbus, Wisconsin (where
he was born
on September 10, 1907) he had
loved to hunt
and fish, with drawing as a secondary
interest.
Some of these first pen-and-ink
drawings
were sold to friends and others
were taken
to Marshall Field's in Chicago.
The manager
of the Picture Gallery there
was impressed,
but because there was no demand
for pen-and-ink
work then, suggested etchings.
For Mr. Bohl,
this meant borrowing books on
etching from
the Chicago Public Library, making
a press
from a discarded clothes wringer,
improvising
a graver that was a darning needle
set into
a fiber handle, and getting his
copper from
a hardware store and polishing
it by hand.
His first plate was a small drypoint
of a
sailboat. Others followed, and
later in the
same year (1935) his work was
reproduced
for the first time in American
Field to illustrate
a story by William C. Hazelton.
The next
year Mr. Bohl illustrated a book
by the same
author called Supreme Duck Shooting
Stories.
In 1934 Mr. Bohl made ten small
etchings
of interesting scenes at Chicago's
Century
of Progress. That July he was
displaying
his etchings at an outdoor show
with about
300 other artists, when Mrs.
Eleanor Roosevelt
stopped to see the show and bought
the work
of two artists of whom one was
Mr. Bohl.
In October of that year Mr. Bohl
and the
former Ann Larson of Lake Owen
in northern
Wisconsin were married and set
out in a secondhand
Ford coupe packed with camping
gear for Stuttgart,
Arkansas, a great rice-growing
area. They
were looking for material for
duck etchings
and they found thousands of ducks,
all willing
to model.
The following summer the young
couple was
back in Chicago and again Mr.
Bohl had his
etchings in an outdoor art show,
this time
featuring ducks and hunting dogs.
One day
two men, both strangers to Mr.
Bohl, stopped
to examine his work and then
asked him to
bring samples of his work to
their office.
Not until the next day, when
he went to the
address the men had given him,
did Mr. Bohl
realize that this was Esquire
magazine that
was so interested in his work.
The result of that call was a
double-page
spread in the November 1935 issue
of the
magazine. They had used some
of his pencil
drawings in the previous issue,
but this
was the first national presentation
of his
etchings. Esquire proclaimed
him as one of
its proudest discoveries.
Already, in a scant five years
and with no
formal art training, Mr. Bohl
had a firmly
established reputation as an
etcher. His
work appeared in several magazines,
and Esquire
featured it regularly from 1934
to 1943.
In 1941 he began doing watercolors
and they,
too were immediately successful.
Esquire
published one each month during
1942, in
addition to his etchings, and
there were
newspaper articles about him
in various part
of the country.
Mr. Bohl's paintings and etchings
have been
shown in many nationally prominent
exhibitions
and he has had one-man shows
in six large
galleries. Examples of his work
are in many
private collections in this country,
Mexico,
Canada, and Europe. It can be
seen in the
Bertha Jaques Memorial at the
National Gallery
in Washington, D. C.; at the
Department of
Library and Archives, State Capitol,
Phoenix,
Arizona; in the building housing
the Department
of Wildlife Ecology, University
of Wisconsin;
and in many other places. - from
www.russellfinkgallery.com.
$275.00
inclusive of S/H/I*
For other payment options, or for further
information, please e-mail.

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