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George Grey Barnard

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George Grey Barnard (May 24, 1863 – April 24, 1938), often written George Gray Barnard, was an American sculptor who trained in Paris. He is especially noted for his heroic sized Struggle of the Two Natures in Man at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, his twin sculpture groups at the Pennsylvania State Capitol, and his Lincoln statue in Cincinnati, Ohio. His major works are largely symbolical in character.<ref>Template:Cite Americana</ref> His personal collection of medieval architectural fragments became a core part of The Cloisters in New York City.

Biography

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Barnard was born in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, but grew up in Kankakee, Illinois, the son of the Reverend Joseph Barnard and Martha Grubb; the grandson and namesake of merchant George Grey Grubb; and a great-grandson of Curtis Grubb, a fourth-generation member of the Grubb iron family and a onetime owner of the celebrated Gray's Ferry Tavern outside Philadelphia.

Barnard first studied at the Art Institute of Chicago under Leonard Volk.<ref name="MMA">"George Grey Barnard (1863–1938)," in Lauretta Dimmick and Donna J. Hassler. American Sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: A catalogue of works by artists born before 1865. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999. pp. 421–27.[1]</ref> The prize he was awarded for a marble bust of a Young Girl enabled him to go to Paris,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> where, over a period of three and half years, he attended the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris (1883–1887), while also working in the atelier of Pierre-Jules Cavelier. He lived in Paris for twelve years, and scored a great success with his first exhibit at the Salon of 1894. He returned to America in 1896, and married Edna Monroe of Boston. He taught at the Art Students League of New York from 1900 to 1903, succeeding Augustus Saint-Gaudens.<ref name="MMA" /> He returned to France, and spent the next eight years working on his sculpture groups for the Pennsylvania State Capitol.<ref name="MMA" /> He was elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design in 189x, and an academician in 1902.

File:George Grey Barnard and Clare Frewen Sheridan.jpg
Barnard and Clare Sheridan touring his cloister in New York City, 1921.

A strong Rodin influence is evident in his early work. His principal works include the allegorical Struggle of the Two Natures in Man" (1894, in the Metropolitan Museum, New York); The Hewer (1902, at Cairo, Illinois); The Great God Pan (1899, at Columbia University); the Rose Maiden (Template:Circa1902, at Muscatine, Iowa); the simple and graceful Maidenhood (1896, at Brookgreen Gardens).

The Great God Pan (1899), one of the first works Barnard completed after his return to America, was originally intended for the Dakota Apartments on Central Park West. Alfred Corning Clark, builder of the Dakota, had financed Barnard's early career; when Clark died in 1896, the Clark family presented Barnard's Two Natures to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in his memory, and the giant bronze Pan was presented to Columbia University, by Clark's son, Edward Severin Clark.

In 1911 he completed two large sculpture groups for the new Pennsylvania State Capitol: The Burden of Life: The Broken Law and Love and Labor: The Unbroken Law. Between the two groups, they feature 27 larger-than-life figures.

His larger-than-life statue of Abraham Lincoln (1917) drew heated controversy because of its rough-hewn features and slouching stance. The first casting is at Lytle Park in Cincinnati, Ohio; the second in Manchester, England (1919); and the third in Louisville, Kentucky (1922).<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

French art dealer René Gimpel described him in his diary (1923), as "an excellent American sculptor" who is "very much engrossed in carving himself a fortune out of the trade in works of art."<ref>Gimpel, Diary of an Art Dealer (John Rosenberg, tr.) 1966:211.</ref> Barnard had a commanding personal manner: "He talks of art as if it were a cabalistic science of which he is the only astrologer", wrote the unsympathetic Gimpel; "he speaks to impress. He's a sort of Rasputin of criticism. The Rockefellers are his imperial family. And the dealers court him."<ref>Gimpel, Diary 15 January 1923.</ref>

Interested in medieval art, Barnard gathered discarded fragments of medieval architecture from French villages before World War I.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He established this collection in a church-like brick building near his home in Washington Heights, Manhattan in New York City. The collection was purchased by John D. Rockefeller Jr. in 1925 and forms part of the nucleus of The Cloisters collection, part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> At least one object, sold to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 1924, he offered with misleading provenance.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Barnard died following a heart attack on April 24, 1938, at the Harkness Pavilion, Columbia University Medical Center in New York. He was working on a statue of Abel, betrayed by his brother Cain, when he fell ill. He is interred at Harrisburg Cemetery in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

1913 Assessment by Lorado Taft

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File:Struggle of the Two Natures in Man 01.jpg
Struggle of the Two Natures in Man (marble, 1892–1894), Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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Selected works

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File:Barnard Prodigal Son Clemen p.20.jpg
The Prodigal Son (1904), Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky
File:Collier's 1921 Lincoln Abraham - Barnard statue.jpg
Statue of Abraham Lincoln (bronze, 1917), Lytle Park, Cincinnati, Ohio.

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Pennsylvania State Capitol sculpture groups

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Template:Main North group: Love and Labor: The Unbroken Law (marble, 1911), Pennsylvania State Capitol, Harrisburg.<ref>Love and Labor: The Unbroken Law, from SIRIS.</ref> Template:Multiple image Template:Clear South group: The Burden of Life: The Broken Law (marble, 1911), Pennsylvania State Capitol, Harrisburg.<ref>The Burden of Life: The Broken Law, from SIRIS.</ref> Template:Multiple image Template:Clear

Legacy

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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  • Template:Cite journal
  • Harold E. Dickson, ed. George Grey Barnard: Centenary Exhibition, 1863–1963 (exh. cat. Pennsylvania State University, 1964).
  • Sara Dodge Kimbrough, Drawn from Life: The Story of Four American Artists Whose Friendship & Work Began in Paris During the 1880s, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1976.
  • Susan Martis, "Famous and Forgotten: Rodin and Three Contemporaries," Ph.D. dissertation, Case Western Reserve University, 2004.
  • Frederick C. Moffatt, Errant Bronzes: George Grey Barnard's Statues of Abraham Lincoln, Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1998.
  • "The George Grey Banard Collection," Philadelphia Museum Bulletin 40, no. 206 (1945): [49][64].
  • Robinson Galleries, The George Grey Barnard Collection, New York: The Galleries, 1941.
  • Nicholas Fox Weber, The Clarks of Cooperstown: Their Singer Sewing Machine Fortune, Their Great and Influential Art Collections, Their Forty-Year Feud, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007.
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Archives of American Art

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