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Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox artist Thomas Ball (June 3, 1819 – December 11, 1911) was an American sculptor and musician. His work has had a marked influence on monumental art in the United States, especially in New England.
Life
[edit]He was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, to Thomas Ball, a house and sign painter, and Elizabeth Wyer Hall. His father died when he was twelve.<ref>Ball, Threescore, 4–5, 25</ref> After several odd jobs to help support his family, he spent three years working at the New England Museum, the precursor to the Boston Museum.<ref>Ball, Threescore, 40ff.</ref> There, he entertained the visitors by drawing portraits, playing the violin, singing, and repairing mechanical toys. He then became an apprentice for the museum wood-carver Abel Brown. He taught himself oil painting by copying prints and casts in the studio of the museum superintendent.Template:Sfn
His earliest work was a bust of Jenny Lind, whom he saw on her 1850 tour of the United States. Copies of his Lind work and his bust of Daniel Webster sold widely before being widely copied by others.<ref name=johnson /><ref>Ball, Threescore, 130</ref> His work includes many early cabinet busts of musicians.Template:Sfn His first statue of a figure was a two-foot high statue of Daniel Webster, on which he worked from photographs and engravings until he managed to see him pass his studio shortly before his death.<ref>Ball, Threescore, 136–8, 290</ref> At thirty-five, in 1854, he travelled to Florence to study.<ref name=":0" />
Musician
[edit]Ball was an accomplished musician from his teenage years, working as a paid singer in Boston churches.<ref>Ball, Threescore, 69–70, 237</ref> He performed as an unpaid soloist with the Handel and Haydn Society beginning in 1846 and with that organization, sang the title role in the first United States performance of Mendelssohn's Elijah,<ref name=johnson>H. Earle Johnson, Hallelujah, Amen!: The Story of the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston (Boston: Bruce Humphries, 1965), 64–6</ref><ref name=nytobit /> and the baritone solos in Rossini's Moses in Egypt. On a visit to Boston years later, he performed the baritone role in Boston's first performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony with the Germania Orchestra on April 2, 1853.<ref>Johnson, Hallelujah, 75</ref><ref>Ball, Threescore, 154</ref>
Painter
[edit]As commissions started to come in, he moved from studio to studio until he settled in a studio in Tremont Row in Boston, where he remained for twelve years. There, he painted several religious pictures and a portrait of Cornelia Wells (Walter) Richards, editor of the Boston Evening Transcript. He then turned his attention back to sculpture.
Sculptor
[edit]He stayed in Boston until 1865 when he returned to Florence to stay there until 1897 as a member of an artistic colony that included Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Hiram Powers. Notables he met in Europe included Franz Liszt, whom he met at the Vatican in 1865 and of whom he produced a portrait bust.<ref name=johnson /><ref name=":0">Ball, Threescore, 273–5</ref>
He made it a practice never to attend the unveiling of his public works. In Boston, he managed to avoid receiving the invitation to the ceremonial dedication of his statue of Governor John Albion Andrew. Instead, he saw the work later, viewing it from different angles. He later wrote: "It was a mean thing to do. I am ashamed of it now, but I could not bring myself to stand on that platform and face the multitude."<ref>Ball, Threescore, 297</ref>
Dartmouth College awarded him an honorary Master of Arts degree.<ref name="Ball, Threescore, 216">Ball, Threescore, 216</ref> When he returned to America, he lived in Montclair, New Jersey, while keeping a studio in New York City.Template:Sfn<ref name="nytobit">Template:Cite news</ref>
In 1880, Ball published an autobiographical volume, My Threescore Years, which he updated in 1890 as My Three Score Years and Ten.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He died at the Montclair home of his daughter, Eliza Chickering Ball, and son-in-law, sculptor William Couper.<ref name="nytobit" /><ref>Ball, Threescore, 295</ref>
Selected works
[edit]- Bust of Jenny Lind (plaster, 1851), New York Historical Society, New York City.
- Bust of Daniel Webster (bronze), Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.
- Statuette of Daniel Webster (bronze, 1853).
- Four bas-relief panels (bronze, 1856), on base of Richard Saltonstall Greenough's Benjamin Franklin statue, Old City Hall, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Statuette of Henry Clay (bronze, 1858), U.S. Senate Art Collection, U.S. Capitol, Washington, D.C.<ref>United States Senate: "Henry Clay". Retrieved August 25, 2012</ref>
- Daniel Webster (bronze, 1860–1868), Central Park, New York City.
- Equestrian Statue of George Washington (bronze, 1864), Boston Public Garden, Boston, Massachusetts.
- The model for this statue is held by the Boston Athenaeum<ref name="harding">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Bust of Edward Everett (marble, 1867), Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Edwin Forrest as "Coriolanus" (marble, 1867), Walnut Street Theater, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.<ref name="Ball, Threescore, 216"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Josiah Quincy (bronze, 1869), Old City Hall, Boston, Massachusetts.<ref>John A. Andrew from Boston Public Library via Flickr.</ref>
- John Albion Andrew (marble, 1870), Doric Hall, Massachusetts State House, Boston, Massachusetts.<ref>General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts: Andrew, John Albion, accessed September 2, 2012</ref><ref>Ball, Threescore, 276–7, 378</ref>
- "The Angel of Death Lifting the Veil from the Eyes of Faith" (Jonas Chickering Monument) (marble, 1872), Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.<ref name=johnson />
- Saint John the Evangelist (marble, 1875), Forest Hills Cemetery, Boston, Massachusetts. Replaced by a polymer replica, 2001.
- Copies of this are in the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; the Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia; and the Montclair Art Museum, Montclair, New Jersey.
- Emancipation Memorial (bronze, 1875), Lincoln Park, Washington, D.C.
- A copy of this was in Park Square, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Charles Sumner (bronze, 1878), Boston Public Garden, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Daniel Webster (bronze, 1885–86), New Hampshire State House, Concord, New Hampshire.<ref>Daniel Webster from PaintedBunting via Flickr.</ref> The commission was first given to sculptor Martin Milmore, then to his brother. Ball took it over following the deaths of both Milmores.<ref>Official Proceedings at the Dedication of the Statue of Daniel Webster at Concord, New Hampshire on the 17th Day of June 1886, (Manchester, NH: John B. Clarke, 1886), p. 9.[1]</ref> This poses differently from his earlier Webster statues.
- P. T. Barnum (bronze, 1887), Seaside Park, Bridgeport, Connecticut.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Ball, Threescore, 317</ref>
Washington Monument
[edit]- George Washington Monument (1883–1893), Methuen, Massachusetts.<ref>Washington Monument, Methuen, Massachusetts from CardCow.</ref><ref>Washington Monument from bigmikelakers via Flickr.</ref> This was Ball's most complex and ambitious work, consisting of a 15-foot bronze statue of Washington, four larger-than-life seated figures, four portrait busts, and four eagles flanked by flags, all displayed on a multi-tiered marble base. The monument was created at Ball's studio in Florence, Italy. His son-in-law, William Couper, assisted in modeling the figures. It was exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition before being installed in Methuen, Massachusetts, and dedicated on February 22, 1900.
- George Washington
- Cincinnatus (seated figure of Washington)
- Revolution (seated figure)
- Oppression (seated figure)
- Victory (seated figure)
- Bust of the Marquis de LaFayette
- Bust of General Henry Knox
- Bust of General Nathaniel Greene
- Bust of General Benjamin Lincoln
- Four sets of Eagles and Flags
The monument was sold in 1958, disassembled, and moved to Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills, California.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Gallery
[edit]-
Benjamin Franklin, Printer (1856), Old City Hall, Boston, Massachusetts.
-
Edward Everett (1867), Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.
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Josiah Quincy (1869), Old City Hall, Boston, Massachusetts.
-
Jonas Chickering Monument (1872), Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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Love's Memories (1873), High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Saint John the Evangelist (1875), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.
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Emancipation Memorial (1875), Lincoln Park, Washington, D.C.
References
[edit]- Attribution
Sources
[edit]- Taft, History of American Sculpture (New York, 1903)
- Nash, Edwin G., "Ball, Thomas" in Dictionary of American Biography, vol. 1 (NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928)
- Thomas Ball, My Threescore Years And Ten: An Autobiography (Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1891)
- Thomas Ball, My Fourscore Years (Los Angeles: Trecavalli Press, 1993)
- http://www.wingedsun.com/books/ball.htm
External links
[edit]- Thomas Ball at Smithsonian Institution Research Information System.
- Template:Cite BDA1906
- Pages with broken file links
- 1819 births
- 1911 deaths
- Artists from Boston
- 19th-century American male opera singers
- Artists from Montclair, New Jersey
- Musicians from Montclair, New Jersey
- American expatriates in Italy
- Sculptors from New Jersey
- American operatic baritones
- Musicians from Boston
- 19th-century American sculptors
- 19th-century American male artists
- American male sculptors
- 20th-century American sculptors
- 20th-century American male artists
- Sculptors from Massachusetts
- Classical musicians from Massachusetts
- Artists of the Boston Public Library
- Singers from New Jersey
- Classical musicians from New Jersey