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New York Library Carved Marble Lion Statue Edward Clark Potter (USA)
$ 13.25
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Statue stands about 7.5 inches tall, 4 inches wide and 7.5 inches long. Has two small chips on backside of statue and one on front left of the base. Please see pictures for more details.New York Library Carved Marble Lion Statue Edward Clark Potter (USA). Edward Clark Potter (1857-1923) created the lions, which were carved in pink Tennessee marble by the Piccirilli brothers. Potter was one of the most outstanding “animaliers” working in the United States. His name ranks with the best sculptors specializing in animal subjects, artists such as A. Phimister Proctor, Edward Kemeys, Frederick Roth, and Anna Hyatt Huntington, among others. It was in fact Potter, at first an apprentice in 1883, who sculpted the horses for most of Daniel Chester French’s monumental equestrian statues, including The Columbus Ouadriga for the Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition (1893); General Grant for Fairmount Park, Philadelphia; George Washington for the City Art Museum, and Ferdinand de Soto, both in St. Louis; and other commissions. French’s Statues of Plenty (2) for the World’s Columbian Exposition, include a powerful bull and horse by Edward Potter, which are now in Garfield Park, Chicago. The collaboration of French and Potter is legendary in the history of American sculpture. Edward Potter’s own work includes the General Slocum equestrian at Gettysburg, thought by Lorado Taft to be the best monument on the historic battlefield; General Joseph Hacker equestrian, Boston State House; General Charles Devens, Worcester, Massachusetts, and General Philip Kearny at Arlington Cemetery. An excellent Robert Fulton portrait is in the collection of The Library of Congress, ‘sans horse’. Major public works by Edward Potter in New York City include the marble statue of Zoroaster, among nine (9) works by different artists, on the cornice of the New York Appellate Court House, Madison Square; Thdian Philosophy and Indian Religion, among the thirty (30) heroic statues atop the cornice of The Brooklyn Museum on Eastern Parkway; and a pair of lions flanking the east enhance of The Pierpont Morgan Library. All these magnificent horses, personages, and famous American heroes, are part of Potter’s noteworthy and highly regarded artistic legacy, but “he is best known for the LIONS at The New York Public Library!"