Richard Hunt, sculptor who transformed public spaces, dies at 88
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Richard Hunt, sculptor who transformed public spaces, dies at 88
In a photo from the Richard Hunt Studio, Richard Hunt working on a piece titled “Flintlock Fantasy or the Promise of Force” in his studio in Chicago, 1994. Hunt, a prolific sculptor whose towering metalwork became a mainstay of American public art, and whose 70-year career drew the attention of presidents from Lyndon B. Johnson to Barack Obama, died on Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023, at his home in Chicago. He was 88. (Richard Hunt Studio via The New York Times)

by Mitch Smith



CHICAGO, IL.- Richard Hunt, a prolific sculptor whose towering metalwork became a mainstay of American public art, and whose 70-year career drew the attention of presidents from Lyndon Johnson to Barack Obama, died Saturday at his home in Chicago. He was 88.

The death was confirmed by Hunt’s studio and by his biographer, Jon Ott. The cause was not given.

Hunt, a son of Chicago’s South Side, was 19 years old in 1955 when he attended the open-casket funeral of Emmett Till, the young Black Chicagoan who grew up near Hunt and who was tortured and killed by white men, his body mutilated, while visiting Mississippi, a murder that helped ignite the civil rights movement. That searing experience was a shaping influence on Hunt’s career and nudged him to experiment with welding and with forging discarded materials into art.

His work drew early acclaim. Two years after Emmett’s funeral, while Hunt was still a student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art in New York purchased one of his sculptures, a steel work called Arachne.

In 1964, Hunt became a visiting artist at Yale University. In 1968, Johnson appointed him to the National Council on the Arts. And in 1971, when he was 35, the Museum of Modern Art displayed more than 70 of Hunt’s works in a retrospective exhibition.

In an appraisal of Hunt’s art that year, critic Hilton Kramer wrote in The New York Times that “there are really very few American sculptors of Mr. Hunt’s generation who have produced a comparable body of work so early in their development.”

But because he was based in Chicago, not New York, Kramer added, “his reputation here has remained that of an outsider.”

Hunt’s sculptures blended classical techniques honed at Chicago’s Art Institute, where he began taking classes as a child, with self-taught soldering and welding. Using unusual methods for that time, he would scrounge in alleys for scrap metal or pick up parts left over from car crashes to use in his art.

He was quoted as saying, “Sculpture is not a self-declaration but a voice of and for my people — over all, a rich fabric; under all, the dynamism of the African American people.”




Hunt became known for his soaring pieces of public art, more than 160 of which have been displayed across the country, according to his studio. Those include Swing Low, a 1,500-pound work of welded bronze that hangs from a ceiling at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, and Flight Forms, an imposing work of welded stainless steel outside Chicago’s Midway International Airport. Other works by Hunt have been installed in locations as varied as a sculpture garden in Kansas, a museum in Kentucky and a playhouse in Michigan.

A recently completed work, which depicts a bird taking flight from a book, is set to be displayed at the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago once that facility opens. Obama, who visited Hunt in the days before his death, has called Hunt “one of the greatest artists Chicago ever produced.” The city’s mayor, Brandon Johnson, said in a statement that the sculptor made an “indelible impact on our city and our world.”

Richard Howard Hunt was born Sept. 12, 1935, in Chicago, the first of two children born to Cleophus Howard Hunt, a barber, and Etoria Inez Henderson Hunt, a librarian. He took an early interest in art, often visiting Chicago’s museums, where he was captivated by works from Africa. As a young teenager, he began taking classes at the Junior School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Hunt is survived by his daughter, Cecilia, an artist; and his sister, Marian, a retired librarian.

Hunt would say that his attendance at the Till funeral nearly 70 years ago helped establish the course for his career. Like Emmett, he had been a Black teenager from Chicago who sometimes traveled to the South to visit relatives. Hunt was quoted as saying that what happened to Emmett “could have happened to me.”

“That really set the tone for his entire artistic life, which was really focused around representing freedom, and freedom in every sense,” said Ott, the biographer.

Even as his work drew the attention of art collectors and political leaders, Hunt spent much of his adult life sleeping on a mattress on the floor of his Chicago studio, which had no television, few amenities and huge piles of scrap metal with which he and his colleagues would build.

The studio building, which he acquired in 1971, blends into a tree-lined residential streetscape in an affluent part of Chicago’s North Side. But inside, the high-ceilinged space, which had been a substation for powering the city’s elevated rail lines, is a living museum.

Alongside half-built sculptures and mementos from his career, Hunt had continued to work well into this year and to supervise his crew carrying out his vision for public art installations. One of his final pieces, Ott said, is a sculptural model for a monument to Emmett Till.

The plan, Ott said, is for Hunt’s crew to complete a large-scale version of that piece, which will eventually be displayed outside Emmett’s childhood home, just two blocks from where Hunt was born.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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