David Stromeyer (born 1946) is an American abstract sculptor who is best known for his large-scale, outdoor, painted steel sculptures.
His work can be found in Smithsonian American Art Museum,[2] DeCordova Sculpture and Art Museum,[3] Overland Park,[4] Strathmore Hall Sculpture Garden in Bethesda,[5] Cornell University,[6] Plattsburgh State University,[7] and corporate and private collections across the country.
[9] In the 1970s, Stromeyer's created sculptures of unfinished steel,[10] influenced by Russian Constructivists and artists such as David Smith and Mark di Suvero.
In 1970, Stromeyer purchased a 200-acre former dairy farm in Northern Vermont's Cold Hollow Mountains, ten miles from the Canada–US border.
[15][16] Other sculptures are assembled at remote locations, for example a recent installation at the Emerson Umbrella Center for the Arts in Concord .