George Grey Barnard

George Grey Barnard (May 24, 1863 - April 24, 1938) was an American sculptor. Barnard was born in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, but grew up in Kankakee, Illinois. He first studied at the Art Institute of Chicago, and in 18831887 worked in P. T. Cavelier’s atelier at Paris while he attended the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He lived in Paris for twelve years, and with his first exhibit at the Salon of 1894 he scored a great success, returning to America in 1896. A strong Rodin influence is evident in his early work. His principal works include, “The Boy” (1885); “Cain” (1886), later destroyed; “Brotherly Love,” sometimes called “Two Friends” (1887); the allegorical “Two Natures” (1894, in the Metropolitan Museum, New York); “The Hewer” (1902, at Cairo, Illinois); “Great God Pan” Dodge Hall quadrangle, Columbia University campus, New York City; the “Rose Maiden”; the simple and graceful “Maidenhood”. In 1912 he completed several figures for the new state capitol at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. A colossal statue of Abraham Lincoln, in 1917, was the subject of heated controversy because of its rough-hewn features and slouching stance. The first casting is now in Manchester, England, the second in Cincinnati, Ohio and the third in Louisville, Kentucky.. The Great God Pan, one of the first works Barnard completed after his return to America, according to at least one account, was originally intended for the Dakota Apartments on Central Park West. Alfred Corning Clark, builder of the Dakota, had financed Barnard's early career; when Clark died in 1896, the Clark family presented Barnard's Two Natures to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in his memory, and the giant bronze Pan was presented to Columbia University, by Clark's son, Edward Severin Clark, 1907. Interested in medieval art, Barnard gathered discarded fragments of Gothic architecture from French villages. He established this collection near his home in Washington Heights, New York City, in a building that he called the Cloisters. It was purchased by John D. Rockefeller Jr. and forms part of the nucleus of The Cloisters collection.
   

External link

Barnard, George Grey Barnard, George Grey

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
borane
yaa asantewaa
giuseppe marc'antonio baretti
bloomingdale
mary hansen
woodridge
the rockin' eighties
shepherdstown
montreal symphony orchestra
sherwood
spelling reform
5 (number)
dorchester (disambiguation)
middleton
irvington
richard harris barham
edmund henry barker
peristalsis
salisbury university
joel barlow
peter barlow
yorkville
incidental music
electrophysiology
george hilaro barlow
carroll
conductance
anne barnard
butanone
ferdinand i of naples
ferdinand ii of naples
seaweed fertiliser
frederick augustus porter barnard
transmembrane helix
mount washington (new hampshire)
mirna
henry barnard
integral membrane protein
cytoskeleton
grammar school
otranto
mid sussex
brundisium
perpetual student