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The Art Institute, founded in 1879, now has approximately 300,000 works of art in its permanent collection, stewarded by eleven curatorial departments and nearly 500 employees. This collection is housed in eight buildings—nearly one million square feet—at the heart of Chicago, one block from Lake Michigan and serving as the eastern anchor of the city's downtown.1.5 million visitors annually from around the globe.
Gunsaulus Hall, a windowless walkway, had collection of European arms and armours
Jean Antoine Houdon (French
Neoclassical Sculptor, 1741-
1828)Bust of Anne Marie Louise Thomas se
Domangeville de Serilly
Paul Albert Bartholome
(French 1848-1928)
Lamenting Group
Paul Albert Bartholome
(French 1848-1928)
Lamenting Group
Paul Albert Bartholome
(French 1848-1928)
Lamenting Group
From the founding of the Art Institute of Chicago, in 1879, architectural fragments have played an important educational role in the museum. The first artifacts acquired by the Art Institute were dramatic full-scale plaster casts of the great monument of Europe, such as the Parthenon frieze at the top of the east walls of the gallery. More recently, the Art Institute has received additional fragments and landmark buildings have been restored in the 1980s and 1990s.
In order for the architectural fragments
collection to serve an
educational function, this permanent
exhibition has been
organized in four sections, that illustrate the Chicago
architecture in the last century
Recreation of original Stock Exchange Trading Room
Healy and Millet Stained glass of The Auditorium Theater (1887-89) removed during restoration in 1974
The Auditorium Theater The Auditorium Theater
The Auditorium Theater
John Donoghue (American 1853-1903)Young Sophocles Leading the Chorus of Victory after the Battle of Salamis
John Donoghue (American 1853-1903)Young Sophocles Leading the Chorus of Victory after the Battle of SalamisDetails
Joseph Mozier (1812 - 1870) Pocahontas
Joseph Mozier (1812 - 1870) was an American sculptor active in Italy. Pocahontas
Joseph Mozier (1812 - 1870) Pocahontas
The Roger McCormick Memorial Court houses a
selection of the Art Institute’s 19th-century American
sculptures, many by expatriates who lived in
Rome or trained in Paris.
Allegorical sculpture was an important teaching tool in the
Victorian age, and so the moralizing stories of Jeptha’s
Daughter; Nydia (from Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s Last
Days of Pompeii); Pocahontas; Zenobia, Queen
of Palmyra; and other historical and literary figures
abound.
The Roger McCormick Memorial Court
Galleries of American Art Sculpture Court
The collection also contains
personifications of Amor Caritas
(Angel of Charity), Solitude,
and Truth. The courtyard is
bathed in natural light, which allows the white marbles to take on hues of
blue, pink, or yellow at various
times of day. Other small-scale
sculptures are placed
throughout the galleries of
American Art
Galleries of American Art
Sculpture Court
Daniel Chester French (1850 – 1931), one of the most prolific and acclaimed American sculptors of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, is best known for his monumental work, the statue of Abraham Lincoln (1920) in the Lincoln Memorial, Washington, D.C.
Truth, 1900
Daniel Chester French (1850 – 1931)
Truth, 1900
Daniel Chester French (1850 – 1931)
Truth, 1900
Augustus Saint Gaudens (American, 1848–1907) Amor Caritas
This is a smaller
version of the bronze statue,
now in the Musee de Louvre in Paris, for
which Auguste Saint-
Gaudens won the grand
prize at the 1900 Paris Exposition
Universelle. Aug
ustu
s S
aint
Gau
dens
- V
iole
t Sar
gent
, mod
eled
189
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Augustus Saint Gaudens (American, 1848–1907) Amor Caritas
Chauncey Bradley Ives (1810-1894)
Jephtha's Daughter
Jephthah appears in the Biblical Book of Judges as a judge over Israel for a period of six years. He lived in Gilead and was a member of the tribe of Manasseh. Jephthah led the Israelites in battle against Ammon and, after defeating the Ammonites, fulfilled a rash vow of his, by sacrificing his daughter.
Chauncey Bradley Ives (1810-1894) Jephtha's Daughter
Randolph Rogers (1825-1892)
Nydia, The Blind Flower Girl of
Pompeii
The Last Days of Pompeii is a novel written by the baron Edward Bulwer-
Lytton in 1834. The novel was inspired by the
painting The Last Day of Pompeii by the Russian
painter Karl Briullov, which Bulwer-Lytton had seen in
Milan.
Nydia, the Blind Flower Girl of Pompeii by
American sculptor Randolph Rogers
(1856), was based on a
character from the book.
Randolph Rogers (1825-1892)
The Lost Pleiade
Personification of one of the stars in the constellation called the Pleiades searches the heavens. (She forfeited her position among her six sister stars because she dared to marry a mortal.)
Greek mythology often provided the content for American nineteenth-century sculpture: the connection to the respected academic tradition of the ancient Greeks rendered the depiction of the nude more acceptable to a conservative audience
Her windswept hair and drapery, and her pose, convey a distinct sense of forward motion, a difficult effect to achieve in marble.
Randolph Rogers (1825-1892)
The Lost Pleiade
Lorado Taft (1860-1936)
The Solitude of the Soul
Lorado Taft (1860-1936)
The Solitude of the Soul
"The Solitude of the Soul", there's a concept which Taft explained as.."The thought is the eternally present fact that however closely we may be thrown together by circumstances.. we are unknown to each other."
Two other versions are known to exist. One is a near-same-sized plaster cast, possibly as early as 1901 and probably one of the models shown in the 19ll photographs, now in the collection of American art at the Dayton Art Institute. The other is a smaller but much finer version cast in bronze, presently in the collection of the Krannert Art Museum on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Lorado Taft (1860-1936)
The Solitude of the Soul
Hermon Atkins MacNeilThe Moqui Runner 1896
Hermon Atkins MacNeil (American, 1866–1947)
The Vow of Vengeance - 1894 and
The Sun Vow
The Sun Vow portrays a young Native American undergoing a rite of manhood by shooting an arrow skyward under the tutelage of an older warrior.
The sculpture displays the artist's desire to blend anthropological accuracy with the idealized beauty of the ancient sculptures that he studied in Rome.
Alexander Phiminster Proctor
(1862-1950)On the War Trail
"On the War Trail" is a reduced version of monumental bronze commissioned for the Civic Center in Denver Colorado. Dignified and erect, with the Native America's spear thrust defiantly outward, horse and rider provide a striking anecdote to the dejected, broken subject of James Earle Fraser's work, "The End of Trail"..
Alexander Phiminster
Proctor(1862-1950)
On the War Trail
James Earle Fraser (1876-1953)End of Trail
"The trail is lost, the path is hid, and winds that blow from out the ages sweep me on to that chill borderland where Time's spent
sands engulf lost peoples and lost
trails."
- Marion Manville Pope.
James Earle Fraser (1876-1953)End of Trail
Text and pictures: Jyoti Srivastava(Internet)Copyright: All the images belong to their authors
Presentation: Sanda Foişoreanuwww.slideshare.net/michaelasanda
Sound: George Gershwin — Lullaby For StringsSound: George Gershwin — Lullaby For Strings (The Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Dimitri Kitayenko)(The Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Dimitri Kitayenko)