Metropolitan Museum of Art Announces Augustus Saint-Gaudens Exhibition
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Metropolitan Museum of Art Announces Augustus Saint-Gaudens Exhibition



NEW YORK, NY.- Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848–1907) was a French-Irish immigrant who became the greatest American sculptor of his day. From humble roots, through his prodigious talent, he rose in society, eventually counting some of America's most influential people in art and literature, diplomacy and economics, technology and social policy among his friends and clients. The collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art contains nearly four dozen works by the accomplished artist, representing the entire range of his oeuvre, from early cameos to innovative painterly bas-reliefs to character-penetrating portrait busts and statuettes derived from his public monuments. These unparalleled holdings will be supplemented with loans from private collections and public institutions in the exhibition Augustus Saint-Gaudens in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The presentation will address the artist's groundbreaking position in the history of late-19th-century American sculpture, his role in advancing American art on the international stage, and the long history of presenting and collecting his work at the Metropolitan Museum.

Exhibition Overview
Organized thematically within a chronological framework, the exhibition will begin with some of Saint-Gaudens's earliest-known works, completed during his apprenticeships to two French émigré cameo cutters. The earliest work in the exhibition—a convincingly rendered cameo portrait of the lawyer John G. Tuffs from around 1861—already suggests the young artist's skill. A cameo bracelet that was depicted in Daniel Huntington's ca. 1862 portrait of Anna Watson Stuart will also be shown alongside the painting. During these years he supplemented his employment with formal studies at the Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design.

From 1867 until 1870, Saint-Gaudens was among the first generation of American artists to study in Paris. He was accepted to the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts in 1868 and fully immersed himself in the network of artists. With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, he moved first to Limoges and then to Rome, and began to attract a circle of American patrons. He continued to carve cameos and also modeled copies of antique busts in Italian collections. While in Rome, he created his first full-length, life-size marble sculpture, Hiawatha (modeled 1871–72, carved 1874). With this ambitious Native American subject, which shows the extent to which he had been influenced by the neoclassical tradition he encountered in Rome, Saint-Gaudens vowed to "astonish the world," and, indeed, he sold this unique sculpture to Edwin D. Morgan, a former governor of New York. (Hiawatha will be shown near the exhibition galleries, in the Museum's Charles Engelhard Court, along with four other large-scale works by the artist.)

Saint-Gaudens's major project of 1877–81 was the commission for the Farragut Monument (located in New York City's Madison Square Park). The monument—which will be represented through a large-scale photograph—represented a turning point in post-Civil War civic sculpture and was lauded for its naturalism and immediacy. The exhibition will feature a 1910 bronze bust cast from Saint-Gaudens's 1879–80 study for the full-scale sculpture. Admiral David Glasgow Farragut—the most celebrated naval commander of the American Civil War—is best remembered for his famous command: "Damn the torpedoes. Full speed ahead!" The fortitude and authority of Saint-Gaudens's subject are shown through his furrowed brows, squinting eyes, and resolute mouth.

In the late 1870s and early 1880s, Saint-Gaudens worked on a series of low-relief portraits in bronze and marble for friends and clients such as the architect Charles F. McKim; the artist and writer Francis David Millet; two-year-old Rodman de Kay Gilder, son of the poet and writer Richard Watson Gilder; the children of the eminent New York lawyer Prescott Hall Butler; and a founder and the first treasurer of the Metropolitan Museum, Samuel Gray Ward.

The monumental marble, mosaic, and cast-iron mantelpiece from the mansion of Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1881–83)—also on view in The Charles Engelhard Court—represents one of Saint-Gaudens's major interior projects. Among other elements, he designed the two arresting classical caryatids Amor (Love) and Pax (Peace) that support the entablature with their heads and upturned arms. The caryatids represent the first appearance of the ethereal female figure that would become a recurring image in Saint-Gaudens's later work, culminating in the gilded bronze Amor Caritas (1880–98, cast 1918).

Other relief sculptures from this time include marble portraits of Mrs. Stanford White in her wedding dress (modeled 1884, carved by 1888) and the children of the prominent New York banker Jacob H. Schiff (modeled 1884–85, carved 1906–7) and bronze portraits of the author Robert Louis Stevenson (modeled 1887–88, cast 1898 and 1910) and art critic Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer (modeled 1888, cast 1890).

The success of Saint-Gaudens's Farragut Monument led to commissions for some 20 public monuments, two of which were unveiled in 1887: the heroic standing Abraham Lincoln (1884–87) for Chicago and the over-life-size Puritan (1883–86) for Springfield, Massachusetts. The exhibition will feature a bronze Head of Lincoln based on the statue and bronze casts of Lincoln's life mask and hands that served as reference points for Saint-Gaudens's figure. Also on view will be a reduction of The Puritan. Eyes focused downward, he strides with a knotty walking stick across the pine-strewn New England wilderness, symbolized by a few scattered branches on the base. About 1894, Saint-Gaudens resolved to make reductions after the full-size Puritan, because of the statue's popularity and for the income he would derive. More than 40 reductions are known, each with minor alterations to the figure. Examples vary in the angles of the hat and the walking stick and particularly in the coloration, which ranges from gold to brown to the green of the Metropolitan's cast.

Davida Johnson Clark, Saint-Gaudens's model and mistress, was an inspiration for Diana, an 18-foot-tall, gilt sheet-copper weathervane that once topped the tower of Stanford White's Madison Square Garden. In addition to a plaster portrait of Miss Clark, the exhibition will feature a 6–1/2-foot gilt-bronze version of Diana (modeled 1893–94, cast 1894 or after) that has long been the centerpiece of the Engelhard Court and an elegant Diana statuette (1893–94, cast 1894 or after).

Saint-Gaudens's last major public memorial was the Sherman Monument (located in Grand Army Plaza, New York). In this gilded-bronze equestrian monument, one of Manhattan's finest public sculptures, General William Tecumseh Sherman is led on his horse by a winged classicized "Victory." She bears traditional attributes—a laurel crown and a palm leaf—and is depicted by the artist as a guiding force. Her outstretched right arm leads the obedient horse, upon which sits a battle-hardened General Sherman. Saint-Gaudens painstakingly arranged drapery on numerous nude models for "Victory" before settling on what he believed was the perfect flow of her robe. In a letter to his niece, the artist wrote, "It's the grandest 'Victory' anybody ever made. Hooraah!"

The exhibition will feature three works that relate to the project: a bronze bust of General Sherman modeled from life (1888, cast 1910); a bronze Head of Victory (1897-1903, cast 1907); and the gilt-bronze statuette Victory (1892–1903, cast 1912 or after [by 1916]), reduced after the full-sized figure.

Also included will be a section on Saint-Gaudens as a master medalist. A highlight will be the high-strike versions of United States $10 and $20 gold coins, considered by many to be the most beautiful examples of American currency ever struck. The exhibition will close with images of Saint-Gaudens by other artists. Examples are two etchings by Anders Zorn (1897 and 1898); two oils—one by Kenyon Cox (1887, replicated 1908) and Ellen Emmet Rand (around 1904); and a bronze bust by Saint-Gaudens's one-time assistant John Flanagan (1905–24, cast 1924).











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