Augustus Lukeman
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Henry Augustus Lukeman (1871-1935) was an American sculptor, specialising in historical monuments. He was born at Richmond, Va., and studied under Launt Thompson and Daniel Chester French in New York and at the Beaux-Arts in Paris under Falguière. He aided French in his statue "The Republic" at the Chicago Exposition and later acted as his assistant in New York. His independent works include monuments, portrait busts and statues, bas reliefs, and ornamental sculpture. He worked the sculptures on Stone Mountain that were originally started by Gutzon Borglum. Lukeman's involvement ended in 1928, and the carving remained incomplete for many years. In September 1963, Roy Faulkner and a team of seven carvers began the final rework of the carving, using Lukeman's models and "point system" to transfer the image to the mountain. They completed the work in 1970.
[edit] Partial list of his works
- "Manu, the Law Giver of India," on the Appellate Court Building, New York
- William Mckinley, (Adams, Massachusetts)
- Robert Livingston, (St. Louis)
- Professor Joseph Henry, (Princeton University)
- Kit Carson Monument in Trinidad, Colorado, (1913), in which Lukeman created the figure of Carson while Frederick Roth executed the horse.
- Four colossal statues for the Royal Bank of Canada headquarters in Montreal
- Four figures for the Brooklyn Institute
- Soldiers' Monument, (Somerville, Massachusetts)
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.