Frederick Hart (sculptor)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick Hart (1943 – 1999) was an American sculptor, best known for his public monuments and works of art in bronze, marble, and clear acrylic (a technique he coined as "sculpting with light").
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Hart was born in Atlanta in 1943 while his father was serving in World War II. His mother died suddenly when Hart was three years old and he was subsequently cared for by his mother's family in rural South Carolina during his early childhood years. He moved to Washington, D.C. when his father remarried in the early 1950's where he attended public school. At age sixteen, he was admitted as a philosophy major to the University of South Carolina.
Hart returned to Washington, D.C. with a desire to study art and attended the Corcoran College of Art and Design and American University where he studied painting and drawing. Later, after sculpting a bust of a girlfriend, he realized an art form that possessed weight, volume, presence and gravity.
As his interest in sculpture began to flourish, Hart became an apprentice stone carver at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. working on gargoyles.
In 1971, while Hart was still working on the stone of the cathedral, an international competition was announced to find a sculptor for the cathedral's west facade. After three years of work and at the age of thirty-one, Hart was commissioned to create The Creation which has been described as "the most monumental commission for religious sculpture in the United States in the twentieth century." 1
It has been said that Hart was the greatest figurative sculptor since Daniel Chester French. "He not only created works of great beauty and gravitas, he was singularly responsible for restoring to American public monuments and memorials an iconology worthy of a great nation." ²
[edit] Notable works
- The Three Soldiers sculpture - Located at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Dedicated in 1984.
- The Creation - Located at Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. Dedicated in 1990.
- President James Earl Carter sculpture - Located at the Georgia State Capital building in Atlanta, Georgia.
- Senator Richard B. Russell sculpture - Located in the rotunda of the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C. Dedicated in 1996.
- The Cross of the Millennium - An acrylic sculpture presented to Pope John Paul II in 1997 in honor of 50 years of priesthood.
- Fauquier County Veterans' Memorial, Operation Desert Storm - Warrenton, VA, 40' bronze collaboration with sculptor Jay Hall Carpenter, 1991.
[edit] Awards and accolades
- In 1985 President Ronald Reagan appointed Hart to a five-year term on the Commission of Fine Arts, a seven-member committee that advises the U.S. Government on matters pertaining the arts, and guides the architectural development of the nation's capital.
- In 1987 Hart received the Henry Hering Award from the National Sculpture Society for sculpture in an architectural setting, shared with architect Philip Frohman (National Cathedral work).
- In 1988 he was the recipient of the quadrennial Presidential Design Excellence Award (Vietnam Memorial work).
- In 1993 Hart received an honorary degree of Doctor of Fine Arts from the University of South Carolina for his "ability to create art that uplifts the human spirit, his commitment to the ideal that art must renew its moral authority by rededicating itself to life, his skill in creating works that compel attention as they embrace the concerns of mankind, and his contributions to the rich cultural heritage of our nation."
[edit] Gallery
The Three Soldiers statue, one of Hart's best known works |
[edit] External links
- The official Frederick Hart website
- The Frederick Hart Collection at Jean Stephen Galleries
- The Frederick Hart Collection at Trinity Gallery in Atlanta
[edit] References
- Tom Wolfe, Frederick Hart: Sculptor, 1995, Hudson Hills Press ISBN 155951201
- James Cooper, Editor and Publisher, American Arts Quarterly