Everything about Augustus Saint-gaudens totally explained
Augustus Saint-Gaudens (
Dublin,
March 1,
1848 –
Cornish, New Hampshire,
August 3,
1907), was the
Irish-born
American sculptor of the
Beaux-Arts generation who most embodied the ideals of the "
American Renaissance." Raised in
New York City, he traveled to Europe for further training and artistic study, and then returned to major critical success in the design of monuments commemorating heroes of the
American Civil War, many of which still stand. In addition to his famous works such as the
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial on
Boston Common and the outstanding grand equestrian monuments to Civil War
generals
John A. Logan, atop a
tumulus in Chicago, 1894-97, and
William Tecumseh Sherman, at the corner of New York's
Central Park, 1892-1903, Saint-Gaudens also maintained an interest in
numismatics and designed the twenty-dollar "
double eagle" gold piece, for the US Mint in 1905-7, still considered the most beautiful American coin ever issued as well as the $10 "Indian Head" gold eagle, both of which were minted from 1907 until 1933. In his later years he founded the "Cornish Colony," an artistic colony that included notable painters, sculptors, writers, and architects. His brother,
Louis St. Gaudens was also a well known sculptor with whom he occasionally collaborated.
Early life and career
Born in Dublin to a French father and an Irish mother, he was raised in
New York, after his parents immigrated to America when he was six months of age. He was apprenticed to a cameo-cutter but also took art classes at the
Cooper Union and the
National Academy of Design. At 19, his apprenticeship completed, he traveled to
Paris where he studied in the
atelier of
Francois Jouffroy at the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts. In 1870, he left Paris for
Rome, to study
art and
architecture, and worked on his first commissions. There he met an American art student, Augusta Homer, whom he married in 1877. In New York he was a member of the
Tilers, a group of prominent artists and writers, including
Winslow Homer,
William Merritt Chase and
Arthur Quartley.
Civil War commemorative commissions
In 1876 he received his first major commission; a monument to
Civil War Admiral David Farragut, in New York's
Madison Square; his friend
Stanford White designed an architectural setting for it, and when it was unveiled in 1881, its naturalism, its lack of bombast and its siting combined to make it a tremendous success, and Saint-Gaudens' reputation was established. The commissions followed fast: the colossal
Standing Lincoln in
Lincoln Park,
Chicago in a setting by architect White, 1884 - 87, considered the finest portrait statue in the United States; a long series of funerary monuments and busts: the
Adams Memorial, the Peter Cooper Monument, and the John A. Logan Monument, the greatest of which is the bronze bas-relief that forms the
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial on Boston Common, 1884 - 1897, Saint-Gaudens labored on it for fourteen years, and even after the public version had been unveiled, he continued with further versions. Two grand equestrian monuments to Civil War
generals are outstanding: to General
John A. Logan, atop a tumulus in Chicago, 1894-97, and to General
William Tecumseh Sherman at the corner of
Central Park in New York, 1892-1903, the first use of Robert Treat Paine’s pointing device for the accurate mechanical enlargement of sculpture models.
Other works
Saint-Gaudens also created the
Charles Stewart Parnell monument on
Dublin's
O'Connell Street. In 1887, when
Robert Louis Stevenson made his second trip to the United States, Saint-Gaudens had the opportunity to make the preliminary sketches for a five-year project of a medallion depicting Stevenson, in very poor health at the time, propped in bed writing. With minor modifications, this medallion was reproduced for the Stevenson memorial in
St. Giles Cathedral,
Edinburgh. Stevenson's cousin and biographer, Graham Balfour, deemed the work "the most satisfactory of all the portraits of Stevenson." Balfour also noted that Saint-Gaudens greatly admired Stevenson and had once said he'd "gladly go a thousand miles for the sake of a sitting" with him.
[2]
Teacher and advisor
His prominence brought him students, and he was an able and sensitive teacher. He tutored young
artists privately, taught at the
Art Students League of New York, and took on a large number of assistants. He was an artistic advisor to the
World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, an avid supporter of the
American Academy in Rome, and part of the
McMillan Commission, which brought into being
L'Enfant's long-ignored master-plan for the
nation's capital.
Through his career Augustus Saint-Gaudens' made a specialty of intimate private portrait panels in sensitive, very low relief, which owed something to the Florentine
Renaissance.
Coinage
He referred to his early relief portraits as "medallions" and took a great interest in the
art of the coin: his twenty-dollar gold piece, the
double eagle coin he designed for the US Mint, 1905-7, though it was adapted for minting, is still considered the most beautiful American coin ever issued.
Chosen by
Theodore Roosevelt to redesign the coinage of the nation at the beginning of the
20th century, Saint-Gaudens produced a beautiful high-relief $20 gold piece that was adapted into a flattened-down version by the
United States Mint. The high-relief coin took up to eleven strikes to bring up the details, and only 12,367 of these coins were minted in 1907.
Two major versions of his coins are known as the "Saint Gaudens High Relief Roman Numerals 1907" and the "Saint Gaudens Arabic Numerals 1907-1933." Other extremely rare types of Saint-Gaudens double eagles, minted in
1907, are prized by collectors and valued from $10,000 to millions of dollars.
The Saint-Gaudens obverse design was reused in the American Eagle gold bullion coins that were instituted in
1986.
Later life, founder of the Cornish Colony
Diagnosed with cancer in 1900, he decided to live at his Federal house with barn-studio set in the handsome gardens he'd made, where he and his family had been spending summers since 1885, in Cornish, New Hampshire— though not in retirement; despite diminishing energy, he continued to work, producing a steady stream of reliefs and public sculpture. In 1904, he was one of the first seven chosen for membership in the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. That same year the large studio burned, with the irreplaceable loss of the sculptor's correspondence, his sketch books, and many works in progress.
At
Cornish, New Hampshire, Saint-Gaudens and his brother Louis attracted a summer colony of artists. The most famous included painters
Maxfield Parrish, and
Kenyon Cox, architect and garden designer Charles Platt, and sculptor
Paul Manship. The colony of artists made for a dynamic social and creative environment, at the center of which stood Augustus Saint-Gaudens. Many other well known artists followed Saint-Gaudens to Cornish, forming what became known as the "Cornish Colony." Included were painters
Maxfield Parrish,
Thomas Dewing, George Deforest Brush and Kenyon Cox, dramatist Percy MacKaye, the American novelist
Winston Churchill, architect,
Charles A. Platt, and sculptors
Paul Manship and
Louis Saint-Gaudens, Augustus' brother. After his death in 1907 it slowly disspiated. His house and gardens is now preserved as
Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site.
His life-size sculpture representing the
Boston Massacre was unfinished at his death, but
as of 1995 is undergoing restoration at the National Historic Site.
Among the public collections holding works by Augustus Saint-Gaudens are the following:
The Addison Gallery of American Art (Andover, Massachusetts), the
Amon Carter Museum (Texas), the Art Gallery of the University of Rochester (New York), Brigham Young University Museum of Art (Utah), the
Brooklyn Museum of Art (New York City), the
Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), the
Cincinnati Art Museum, the
Courtauld Institute of Art (London), the
Currier Museum of Art (New Hampshire), the
Delaware Art Museum, the
Detroit Institute of Arts, the
Honolulu Academy of Arts, the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the
Mead Art Museum (Amherst College, Massachusetts), the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design, the
Montclair Art Museum (New Jersey),
Musée d'Orsay (Paris), the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the
National Academy of Design (New York City), the
National Gallery of Art (Washington D.C.), the
National Portrait Gallery (London), the
North Carolina Museum of Art, the
National Historic Site (New Hampshire), the
Newark Museum (New Jersey), the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, the
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery (Lincoln, Nebraska), the
Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington D.C.), the
Tate Gallery (London), the
Toledo Museum of Art (Ohio) and the United States Senate Art Collection.
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