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Paul Manship

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Paul Howard Manship (December 24, 1885January 28, 1966) was a prominent American sculptor of the 20th century.

Paul Manship began his art studies at the St. Paul School of Art in From there he moved to Philadelphia and continued his education at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Following that he migrated, as so many artists do, to New York City where he enrolled in the Art Students League where he studied anatomy with George Bridgman and modeling under Hermon McNeil. From 1905 to 1907 he served as an assistant to sculptor Solon Borglum and spent the two years after that studying with Charles Grafly and assisting Isidore Konti.

In 1909, at Konti's urging, he entered the competition for, and won, the highly sought after Prix de Rome and shortly there after encamped for Rome where he attended the American Academy from 1909 till 1912. While in Europe he became increasingly interested in Archaic art and his own work began to take on some archaic features and he became more and more attracted to classical subjects. He also developed an interest in classical sculpture of India, and traces of that influence can be observed in his work (see "Dancer and Gazelles" in Images). Manship was one of the first artists to become aware of the huge art history that was being excavated at the time and so became intensely interested in Egyptian, Assyrian and pre-classical Greek sculpture.

When he returned to America from his European sojourn Manship found that his style was attractive to both modernists and conservatives. His simplification of line and detail appealed to those who wished to move beyond the Beaux-Arts classical realism prevalent in the day. Also, his view of and use of a more traditional "beauty" as well as an avoidance of the more radical and abstract trends in art made his works attractive to the more conservative art collectors.

Because the volume of work that he was commissioned to do was very great, he produced over 700 works in his career, Manship always employed assistants of the highest quality and two of them, Gaston Lachaise and Leo Friedlander went on to create significant places for themselves in the history of American sculpture.

Manship's work is often considered to be a major precursor to Art Deco.

Manship was very adept at low relief and used these skills to produce a large number of coins and medals, one of his later ones being the John F. Kennedy inaugural medal.

Although not known as a portraitist, he did produce statues and busts of Theodore Roosevelt, Samuel Osgood, John D. Rockefeller, Robert Frost, Gifford Beal and Henry L. Stimson.

Manship was chosen by the American Battle Monuments Commission to create monuments following both the First and Second World Wars. There are located respectively in the American Cemetery at Thiaucourt, France in 1926, and in the military cemetery at Anzio, Italy.

Although he did not produce many public monuments in his long and illustrious career, like many other sculptors of the day Manship created some architectural sculpture and a number of fountains. These include:

References

External links

Images

Image:DianaHound.JPG|"Diana and a Hound" Image:Prometheus.JPG|"Prometheus" at Rockefeller Center Image:GroupOfBear.JPG|"Group of Bears" Image:PMDancer&Gazelles.jpg|"Dancer with Gazelles", 1916 Image:PMIndianHunterAndHisDog.jpg|"Indian Hunter and His Dog", 1926 Image:PMYoungLincoln-1.jpg|"Young Lincoln" or "Hoosier Youth", Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1932 Image:PMYoungLincoln-2.jpg|"Young Lincoln" or "Hoosier Youth" (detail), Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1932

 


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