Return
to Top 50 Homepage
EDGAR TOLSON
(American, 1904-1984)
Temptation, 1975-76
Poplar, cedar, paint, pencil, and magic marker
12 15/16 x 10 5/8 x 7 1/2"
Transfer from the Kentucky Arts Commission 1981.5.5
Edgar Tolson is Kentucky’s
most celebrated folk artist. Though he recalled making a few carvings
as a child, Tolson turned to woodcarving after suffering a stroke in 1957,
when he was forced to give up his former occupations as carpenter and
stonemason. Using a penknife and a piece of Kentucky poplar or pine, he
began making animals, walking sticks, and simple figures. With the support
and encouragement of Lexington collectors John and Miriam Tuska, Tolson
began to carve his Fall of Man cycle, comprised of Adam and Eve in Paradise,
Temptation, Original Sin, the Expulsion, and Cain Slaying Abel. Though
he expanded his repertoire with traditional American folk art themes such
as Noah’s Ark, yoked oxen, Uncle Sam, preachers, and other figures,
Tolson’s compelling tableaux of Adam and Eve would become his signature
theme. In Temptation, Tolson skillfully carved the couple in
the Garden of Eden as they are tempted by the serpent slithering around
the delicately carved tree.
|