George Washington 1875 John Rogers American With the nation’s approaching centennial, the market-savvy Rogers began modeling a statuette of George Washington (1732-1799) in spring 1875. The careful detailing of Washington's garb suggests the artist made use of the many drawings he executed in 1871 and 1872 in preparation for the unrealized group, “Camp Fires of the Revolution.” In pose, costume, and likeness, Rogers’s “Washington” owes much to Jean Antoine Houdon's marble statue of Washington (ca. 1788-91) that was installed in the Virginia State House in Richmond in 1796. "Washington" was pat


George Washington 1875 John Rogers American With the nation’s approaching centennial, the market-savvy Rogers began modeling a statuette of George Washington (1732-1799) in spring 1875. The careful detailing of Washington's garb suggests the artist made use of the many drawings he executed in 1871 and 1872 in preparation for the unrealized group, “Camp Fires of the Revolution.” In pose, costume, and likeness, Rogers’s “Washington” owes much to Jean Antoine Houdon's marble statue of Washington (ca. 1788-91) that was installed in the Virginia State House in Richmond in 1796. "Washington" was patented on October 19, 1875, and was included in the large display of Rogers’s work at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. The statuette, devoid of Rogers’s customary narrative detail, did not sell well and was dropped from his catalogue of available statuary by George Washington 11940


Size: 1360px × 2820px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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