Kuhler, Otto "Gateway to the New World"
Kuhler, Otto "Gateway to the New World"
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Kuhler, Otto "Gateway to the New World"
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Kuhler, Otto "Gateway to the New World"

Kuhler, Otto "Gateway to the New World"

Regular price
$1,200
Sale price
$1,200
Regular price
$0
Sold
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Otto Kuhler. "Gateway to the New World." [View from Battery Park up Broadway with "El" in foreground]

1926. 13 x 9 3/8. Etching. Signed in pencil. Excellent condition. 

Although best known for his industrial designs, Otto Kuhler (1894- 1977) is well regarded as a fine artist and draftsman. Born in Germany, Kuhler was the sole heir to his family's successful steel business, Kuhler Forges. After WWI however, the business and his family's fortune were in ruins.

After living briefly in Dusseldorf, and partly due to the advice of friend Joseph Pennell, he took up etching and emigrated to the States in 1923. Otto Kuhler's etchings of begrimed industry sprang from the same optimistic response to technology that led to his colorful streamlined designs for the Milwaukee, Lehigh and other railroads in the 1930s. His prints bridge art and industry -- freely-sketched scenes that celebrate precise engineering and industrial might. This merging of industry and art proved so successful that after years of submitting designs, a locomotive based on Kuhler's designs was built. The engine, Hiawatha, rolled out of the Schenectady, New York yard in May, 1935. It was the first streamlined steam locomotive to be built from scratch in America. This signaled the start of the next phase of his career- as a successful industrial designer.

Click the links below to view other prints from this artist:

"Monsters & Midgets"

"The Queen and the Slaves"

"Steamboat Wharf"