Pullinger, Herbert  “Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow."  [Germantown]
Pullinger, Herbert  “Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow."  [Germantown]
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Pullinger, Herbert  “Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow."  [Germantown]
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Pullinger, Herbert  “Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow."  [Germantown]

Pullinger, Herbert “Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow." [Germantown]

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Herbert Pullinger. "Tar Paper House. Frog Hollow."  [Germantown]. 

5 3/8 x 9.  Etching.  Signed in pencil.

The low ground, in the area of West Seymour Street, between Germantown Avenue and extending as far as Wayne Avenue was known as “Frog Hollow.”   

A life-long resident of Philadelphia and popular teacher at the old Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Arts from 1923 to 1958, Herbert Pullinger (1878-1961) practiced also as a painter, printmaker, and commercial illustrator.  Described as an “urban romantic” at a 1991 exhibit of his works at the Atwater Kent Museum, he was a part of the great art movement of the second quarter of the twentieth century that was characterized by the Ashcan School.  He never promoted his art aggressively so prices on his works have  remained moderate; however, at his best he is as good as the great names of his time, and he is fondly remembered in the Philadelphia area by former students and friends who knew him well.  Ref.: Martin P. Snyder, “Herbert Pullinger of Philadelphia: A Memoir” in North American Prints, 1913-1947 edited by David Tatham. (Syracuse, 2006): 110-122.