Sylvia Shaw Judson

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Sylvia Shaw Judson (1897 – 1978), also known as Sylvia Shaw Haskins, was an American sculptor and teacher.

Shaw was born in 1897 in Lake Forest, Illinois, near Chicago, the daughter of prominent Chicago architect Howard Van Doren Shaw. She attended the Westover School in Connecticut. In 1917, she married Clay Judson (1892-1960), a Chicago lawyer. She studied with Albin Polasek at the Art Institute of Chicago and went to Paris in 1920 to continue her studies under Antoine Bourdelle at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. She won the Logan Prize in 1929 for her sculpture Little Gardener. She authored The Quiet Eye: A Way of Looking at Pictures and For Gardens and Other Places, The Sculpture of Sylvia Shaw Judson and taught sculpture at the American University in Cairo in 1963. As an adult, she joined the Religious Society of Friends and became an active participant in the church.

She later married Sidney Haskins, later of Philadelphia.

Judson had work exhibited at Brookgreen Gardens, South Carolina; the White House, Washington, D.C.; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Art Institute of Chicago; and the National Academy of Design, New York City. In 1926, she was awarded an honorable mention at the Chicago Art Club.

Contents

[edit] Works

[edit] Sculpture

[edit] Print

  • The Quiet Eye: A Way of Looking at Pictures, 1982 Regnery Publishing, ISBN 0895266385
  • For Gardens and Other Places, The Sculpture of Sylvia Shaw Judson
  • Illustrations for Songs of a Baby's Day, To the Tune of The Very Gentle Jog. By Frances Shaw (mother), 1928

[edit] Further reading

  • Sandra L. Underwood, The "Bird Girl", The Story of a Sculpture by Sylvia Shaw Judson, Schiffer Publishing, Limited, Atglen, PA, June 2006, ISBN 0764323709
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