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O anjo da morte e o escultor, parte do Monumento Comemorativo Milmore

1889–93, carved 1921–26
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 700
A família do escultor Martin Milmore, de Boston, encomendou a French um monumento para homenagear sua memória e a de seu irmão Joseph. O bronze original foi construído em 1893 no cemitério de Forest Hills em Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Esta réplica em mármore foi esculpida mais tarde para o Metropolitan. O anjo da morte aparece para um jovem escultor e com a mão esquerda interrompe seu trabalho. Na direita, ele carrega um buquê de papoulas, que simboliza o sono eterno. French, um dos principais escultores de monumentos do início do século XX, é conhecido por sua estátua de Lincoln sentado para o Monumento a Lincoln, em Washington, DC.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: O anjo da morte e o escultor, parte do Monumento Comemorativo Milmore
  • Artista: Daniel Chester French, americano, 1850–1931
  • Data: 1889–93, esculpido em 1921–26
  • Meio: Mármore
  • Dimensões: 2,38 x 2,55 x 0,83 m
  • Linha de créditos: Doação de um grupo de patronos do Museu, 1926
  • Número de acesso: 26.12
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

Disponível apenas em: English
Cover Image for 4512. The Angel of Death and the Sculptor from the Milmore Memorial

4512. The Angel of Death and the Sculptor from the Milmore Memorial

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MORRISON HECKSCHER: In the Milmore Memorial by Daniel Chester French, a youthful sculptor carves the relief of a sphinx. But a winged angel of death reaches out to halt his hand. This hand gesture epitomizes the essence of this large marble sculpture. Death comes gently, to lead the young man to eternal sleep, which is symbolized by the poppies held in the angel’s right hand.

The Milmore family from Boston commissioned the memorial to honor their two deceased sons, Martin and Joseph. Both were artists, and among their accomplishments was in fact a sculpture of a sphinx. But French was also drawn to the mystery surrounding this ancient symbol.

Here, French’s combination of ideal and naturalistic elements is masterful. The energetic figure of the sculptor represents ideal youth. But to realistically model the angel’s massive wings, French had an ornithologist friend send him actual specimens of bird wings.

The original bronze monument was erected in 1893 in the family plot in Massachusetts. This replica was carved for the Metropolitan in the early 1920s. The memorial was a landmark in funerary sculpture, and it received great praise. Indeed, many Americans actually had photographs of this monument hanging in their homes.

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