Augustus Saint-Gaudens in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART BULLETIN | VOLUME 66 | NUMBER 4

Augustus Saint-Gaudens in The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Tolles, Thayer
2009
80 pages
100 illustrations
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To late nineteenth-century Americans Augustus Saint-Gaudens was well known as a sculptor of public monuments rendered in a naturalistic, vital, and thoroughly modern aesthetic. A son of French-Irish immigrants, Saint-Gaudens (1848–1907) embodied the American success story, rising from humble Lower East Side circumstances to become the finest American sculptor of his day, attracting international acclaim and patronage. Born in Dublin, Ireland, he was the quintessential cosmopolite artist—during his four-decade career he moved effortlessly between studios in New York, Paris, Rome, and his beloved Cornish, New Hampshire. He counted among his friends a cultural who's who: writers Henry James and William Dean Howells, artists John Singer Sargent and Maxfield Parrish, and architects Stanford White and Charles McKim, and his clients included Cornelius Vanderbilt II and President Theodore Roosevelt. But Saint-Gaudens always remained self-effacing, quipping that it was his exotic name (as he said, pronounced Gaudens, as in "gaudy") as much as his sculptures that brought him distinction. Whether or not his name is as broadly familiar today, his art remains celebrated and relevant, from the gilded equestrian monument to William Tecumseh Sherman in New York to the storied twenty-dollar "double eagle" gold piece he designed for President Roosevelt.

The Metropolitan's collection of works by Saint-Gaudens numbers 45—in marble, bronze, plaster, terracotta, and even shell. His association with the Museum is reflected not only in these tangible objects but also through his career-long connections with its staff and trustees and their tireless efforts to assemble a comprehensive memorial exhibition of 154 works in the Great Hall in 1908. In subsequent years, a representative group of Saint-Gaudens's sculptures entered the collection through astute purchases and generous gifts and bequests. Now, just over one hundred years after the artist's death, the Metropolitan's holdings of his works continue to grow steadily, affirming the adage "adding strength to strength." Saint-Gaudens's engaging story and his substantial legacy at the Metropolitan are detailed in this issue of the Bulletin, written by Thayer Tolles, Associate Curator in the Department of American Paintings and Sculpture.

Met Art in Publication

John Tuffs, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Shell, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
ca. 1861
Hiawatha, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1871–72, carved 1874
Eva Rohr, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1872
Demosthenes, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1873–74
William Maxwell Evarts, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1872–73; carved 1874
The Bryant Vase, Tiffany & Co., Silver and gold, American
Tiffany & Co.
1876
Jules Bastien-Lepage, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1880, cast 1910
Charles F. McKim, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1878
Richard Watson Gilder, Helena de Kay Gilder, and Rodman de Kay Gilder, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Plaster, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
modeled 1879, cast ca. 1883–84
Stained Glass Lunette from the Cornelius Vanderbilt II House, New York, John La Farge  American, Leaded opalescent glass, American
John La Farge
ca. 1880–82
Vanderbilt Mantelpiece, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, mosaic, oak, and cast iron, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
ca. 1881–83
Homer Schiff Saint-Gaudens, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1882; carved 1906–7
Samuel Gray Ward, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1881, cast 1908
The Children of Jacob H. Schiff, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1884–85, carved 1906–7
Sketch of Saint Gaudens's Statue of Deacon Samuel Chapin, Springfield, Massachusetts, Stanford White  American, Pastel, charcoal, and pencil on paper, American
Stanford White
ca. 1887
Mrs. Stanford White (Bessie Springs Smith), Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Marble, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1884, carved by 1888
Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer (Mariana Griswold), Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1888, cast 1890
Robert Louis Stevenson, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1887–88; cast 1910
Davida Johnson Clark, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Plaster, shellac, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1886
Diana, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1893–94, cast 1894 or after
Showing 20 of 59

Citation

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Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and Thayer Tolles, eds. 2009. Augustus Saint-Gaudens in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York : New Haven: Metropolitan Museum of Art ; Yale University Press.