Robert Ortlieb (1925–2011) was an accomplished American sculptor born in San Diego, CA. His career spanned six decades, marked by an extensive roster of major museum and gallery exhibits and numerous juried exhibit awards.
Ortlieb’s sculptural practice encompassed a wide range of materials, including rare woods, alabaster, marble, lapis lazuli, onyx, sandstone, bronze, hammered sheet copper, terracotta, and plexiglass. His decision not to rely on preparatory drawings reflected a high level of material and formal mastery. Drawing functioned as an independent mode of expression rather than as a planning tool for sculpture, and he produced an extensive body of drawings using India ink and colored pencils.
Selected Exhibits
Robert Ortlieb’s work has been featured at major museums and galleries throughout the United States and abroad. At age 29, his work was selected to exhibit alongside that of Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall and others at Cincinnati Art Museum’s Third International Biennial of Contemporary Color Lithography (1954). A partial list of additional museums that featured his work in solo or group exhibitions includes:
- California Palace of the Legion of Honor
- Cincinnati Art Museum
- Crocker Art Museum
- Dallas Museum of Art
- Denver Art Museum
- Illinois State Museum
- La Biennale di Venezia
- Laguna Art Museum
- Long Beach Museum of Art
- Los Angeles County Museum of Art
- Oakland Museum of California
- Museum of Modern Art Dubrovnik
- Norton Simon Museum (formerly named Pasadena Art Institute)
- Palm Springs Art Museum
- Riverside Art Museum
- Santa Barbara Museum of Art
Selected Awards
- 1977 juried award win for sculpture, Laguna Art Museum
- 1971 California Art Club Annual Juried Exhibition, Sculpture Award
- 1968 California Art Club Annual Juried Exhibition, Sculpture Award
- 1967 California Art Club Annual Juried Exhibition, Sculpture Award
- 1966 California Art Club Annual Juried Exhibition, Sculpture Award
- 1965 California Art Club Annual Juried Exhibition, Sculpture Award
- 1959 juried 1st place award, Laguna Art Museum (formerly named Laguna Art Gallery)
- 1958 juried 1st place award, Laguna Art Museum (formerly named Laguna Art Gallery)
- 1957 juried 1st place award, Laguna Art Museum (formerly named Laguna Art Gallery)
- 1953 Juried Exhibition Award, San Diego Museum of Art (formerly named Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego)
Public Installations
- Apothecaries bronze relief at the University of Southern California Alfred E. Mann School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Mother and Child monumental abstract bronze at the Costa Mesa-Donald Dungan Library plaza
- Etheric Male at the University of California, Riverside Tomás Rivera Library
- Etheric Female at Riverside Community College
- Mother and Child, a 9-foot figurative terrcotta piece at The Neighborhood Church of Palos Verdes, California
- The Burning Bush at Temple Isaiah Jewish Community Center of Palm Springs
Early life and education
Robert Ortlieb was born in San Diego in 1925 to William Ortlieb and Ruth Powers Ortlieb, a notable California Modernist painter and teacher. Ruth Ortlieb received a Master of Fine Arts degree from Claremont College while studying under Millard Sheets and taught art at San Diego State College. She joined Dorr Bothwell, Donal Hord, and Everett Gee Jackson among others to form a group known as the "San Diego Moderns." She traveled extensively and exhibited widely during the 1930s, including at the San Diego Fine Art Gallery, the Cincinnati Art Museum, the Pasadena Art Institute, the California Pacific International Exposition, and the Golden Gate International Exhibition.
Robert Ortlieb attended Manual Arts High School in Los Angeles where his art teacher urged him to pursue formal education in the arts. This led him to earn a Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts at USC. Here he became a protégé of renowned sculptor Robert Merrell Gage and also studied under Francis de Erdely, Edgar Ewing, and Glen Lukens. The influence of Gage and de Erdely in particular, is evident in Ortlieb's art, which combines a solid grasp of human form, with an abstract and modernist sensibility.
Following graduate school, Ortlieb traveled throughout Mexico and South America, introducing him to the primitive and megalithic artwork of the region. He then journeyed to Europe where he engrossed himself in Michelangelo's stone sculpture along with the wood carvings of German Renaissance masters.
Throughout his youth and adulthood, Ortlieb also made frequent trips into the High Sierras and Canadian Rockies. Ortlieb once commented: "I could really feel the excitement of the elements in those remote places. It was like an explosion in the mind's eye." Painter and art historian Janice Lovoos stated "His early confrontations with nature are reflected in his sculptures. They soar into enveloping space. We catch a glimpse of the rhythm of the universe."
Lectures and Demonstrations
Robert Ortlieb was known for highly sought-after lecture-demonstrations that reflected his mastery of theory, technique, and skill. In 1954, he was invited to present a formal lecture-demonstration at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (formerly named Los Angeles County Museum). Throughout his career, he continued giving presentations at art centers and institutions that emphasized material processes, problem-solving, and the expressive foundations of sculpture. A recorded example of his Changing Face of Moses sculpture demonstration is available here.
Ortlieb also garnered a devoted following among students at diverse venues including University of Southern California (USC) Idyllwild Arts Foundation, Loma Linda University, Palos Verdes Arts Center, Riverside Art Museum, Palm Springs Village Center for the Arts, and the Institute Professionale de Stato per l'Industria de l'Artigianato del Marmo in Carrara, Italy.
In recognition of his professional standing, expertise, and reputation, Ortlieb was invited to participate as a judge in a number of juried art exhibitions, including the Beverly Hills Art Show, the Orange County Fair Fine Arts Competition, and the Pasadena Outdoor Arts Fair.
Reception
Robert Ortlieb's work was featured in American Artist Magazine and other publications.
Examples of how his work has been characterized are as follows:
- Arthur Millier, art critic for the Los Angeles Times: "I spotted one work of superb wood carving, Robert Ortlieb's 'Todtentanz' or Dance of Death. Two skeletons, the macabre dance rhythm carried through to the last gouge mark. You can bet your last buck it won't win a prize. It doesn't fit any modern category. It's JUST ART."
- Howard Burke, art critic for the Los Angeles Examiner: "In his direct approach, hewing directly into the marble with his chisel without preliminary sketches, Ortlieb captures and reveals reality in a search for universal artistic forms. It is astonishing to see him work. He is the only sculptor I ever heard of, other than Michelangelo, who will attack the marble roughshod with the chisel, working directly. The result is an aliveness, a sensitive freshness. He has made monumental religious sculpture in expressionistic modern style for churches. His leonine head of Moses depicts a sternness associated with this remarkable prophet. There is a fine feeling for form, balance, rhythm, and experience in nature in his abstract designs."
- Carolyn Strickler, art critic for the Los Angeles Examiner and historian for the Los Angeles Times: "The Martyr, done in redwood burl, one of the most difficult woods in the world to work with, is Ortlieb's newest sculpture.. one of the most impressive examples of his depth of imagination, craftsmanship, and considerable talent..(it) successfully embodies concepts of major importance which have concerned Robert Ortlieb for almost ten years."
- Spencer Barefoot, art critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, wrote in 1948 when Ortlieb was just 22 years old: "The few pieces on exhibit would cause one to count [Robert Ortlieb] as a promising young talent."
- Janice Lovoos, author and art historian: "He carves beyond what he is able to express in words. In his more complex pieces, he makes ample use of incarving, an incredibly difficult technique in which he works from the inside out - opening up the inner structure of the material. In this remarkable manner he may carve miniscule heads out of other carved heads, faces within eyes, mouths within mouths, or an arabesque of figures. Vitality springs from every form. HIs work may boggle the mind, stretch the imagination to new limits. What is he trying to tell us? In essence, he is attempting to portray the eternal struggle of man to better the human condition. To exchange an unsatisfying material state of consciousness for a real and lasting spiritual awareness."
- Author Norman Corwin: "Ortlieb makes a solid virtue of passion regardless of modes, media, substance, and treatment; that he charges his materials with so much energy and emotion that they breathe, swirl, rise, fall, and replicate; that with uncommon vigor he compounds pain, ecstasy, tension, and mystery. Not the least astonishing aspect of Ortlieb is his versatility. I am aware of no other painter or sculptor, including some of the most notable of the past or present, who exceeds his range or expresses as many moods or emotions."
Personal life
Ortlieb married Donna Forman Ortlieb in 1976. Donna Ortlieb danced professionally for Pacific Ballet Theatre and toured briefly with Holiday on Ice. She later became an attorney and practiced criminal law in Southern California. They raised Donna's two children from a previous marriage, Adam Ortlieb and Sarah Fraser.
Controversies
In 1957 a nine-foot walnut statue by Ortlieb of the Crucifixion of Jesus entitled "For They Know Not What They Do" was placed in Westwood Community Methodist Church. Ortlieb described it as including "every conflict imaginable: life and death, good and evil, intense suffering and a powerful spiritual message". In March of that year associate pastor Dr. Alfred W. Painter said there had been objections to the sculpture but that its overall impact had been positive.[1] The next month, however, Ortlieb was told to remove the work "in the interest of the congregation". Painter said he wished the sculpture could remain, but that "its effectiveness made the congregation uncomfortable". Ortlieb said "If one person got the message I have instilled in the statue I feel I have accomplished what I wanted to do."[2]
In 1998, Ortlieb's bronze sculpture "Emergence", which was then on loan to the city of Oceanside, California and displayed in the foyer of the city's Planning Department, was mysteriously covered with a curtain or drapery material. In 2000 the same work, which weighs 480 pounds and was completed in 1979, was included in an exhibition at the Palos Verdes Art Center entitled "Big Sculpture".
External Links
References
- ↑ "The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California". Newspapers.com. 1957-03-23. Retrieved 2025-09-29.
- ↑ "The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California". Newspapers.com. 1957-03-23. Retrieved 2025-09-29.