Horatio Greenough: An American Sculptor's Drawings

by ; ;
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1999-09-01
Publisher(s): Univ Pr of New England
List Price: $26.96

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Summary

Horatio Greenough is generally regarded as the first American sculptor to achieve international fame. A Boston native educated at Harvard, Greenough spent most of his professional life in Florence, Italy. While there, he nurtured lasting friendships with such Americans on the Grand Tour as James Fenimore Cooper, Thomas Cole, and Samuel F. B. Morse. Although he received two key US Government commissions--George Washington, 1832-41, and The Rescue, 1837-51--contemporary aversion to his depiction of Washington as an American Zeus, and this century's discomfort with the subject of The Rescue (a confrontation between a bellicose American Indian and a pioneer family) have worked against public understanding and viewing of his work. This handsome presentation of 48 of his drawings, only two previously seen publicly, and 14 of his sculptures, reveals much about this gifted, yet tormented artist. The accompanying text shows how the process of drawing relates to the making of sculpture and, using the artist's rich correspondence, provides insight into the relationship between patron and artist and the unpredictability of artistic achievement in pre-Civil War America.

Table of Contents

Foreword and Acknowledgmentsp. 9
Lenders to the Exhibitionp. 11
Introductionp. 13
Horatio Greenoughp. 15
Chronologyp. 38
Catalogue of the Exhibitionp. 41
The Studentp. 43
Portraits and Figures from Lifep. 54
Allegorical, Classical, Biblical, and Literary Subjectsp. 70
George Washingtonp. 85
The Rescuep. 99
Portraits of Greenoughp. 106
Works Citedp. 111
Indexp. 115
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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