arts:harriet_whitney_frishmuth
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//The New York Academy of Medicine Medal, 1931//\\ | //The New York Academy of Medicine Medal, 1931//\\ | ||
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+ | Harriet Frishmuth was born in Philadelphia, | ||
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+ | Her first commissioned piece was in 1910 from the New York County Medical Society who commissioned her to do a bas-relief. She also modeled ashtrays, bookends, and small figures for Gorham; these early pieces are highly sought after by collectors. Her career grew steadily and she became well-known for her beautiful renderings of females in bronze, particularly dancers (Desha Delteil frequently modeled for her). Her small bronzes were sought after by private collectors and by museums, and her large bronzes often found a central place in elaborate garden settings. Her work was exhibited at the National Academy of Design, the Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, | ||
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+ | Harriet Frishmuth scorned modern art and was quite outspoken on the subject, calling it " | ||
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+ | ==== Joy of the Waters ==== | ||
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+ | One of Harriet Frishmuth' | ||
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+ | Frishmuth made two versions of Joy of the Waters: the 63 1/2-inch size, of which there were more than 60 bronze castings, | ||
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+ | The beginning of the 20th century saw a number of women (among them Frishmuth, Anna Hyatt Huntington, and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney) successfully pursue careers as sculptors, a field that had traditionally been considered masculine. Born in Philadelphia, | ||
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+ | - First, always look at the silhouette of a subject and be guided by it. | ||
+ | - Second, remember that movement is the transition from one attitude to another. It is a bit of what was and a bit of what is to be. | ||
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+ | Frishmuth later studied at the Art Students League in New York before setting up her own studio about 1908. Throughout her career, she was especially interested in depicting stylized movement, especially of the female figure, as exemplified by Joy of the Waters. |
arts/harriet_whitney_frishmuth.1231978910.txt.gz · Last modified: 2009/01/14 19:21 by tomgee