William Henry Rinehart

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William Henry Rinehart, American sculptor (1825 - 1874), was born in Maryland and studied sculpture in Baltimore, at what is now called the Maryland Institute College of Art. In 1858 he relocated to Italy, where he resided for the rest of his life. He died in Italy (Rome or perhaps Florence - sources are inconclusive).

According to artcyclopedia.com and askart.com, Rinehart's sculptures, neoclassical in style and mostly of human figures, are in public collections such as those of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City), the National Gallery of Art, (Washington, DC), the Walters Art Museum (Baltimore), the Museum of Fine Arts (Springfield, Massachusetts), the Brooklyn Museum of Art (New York City), and Ohio's Columbus Museum of Art, among others.

Rinehart was financially successful in his lifetime, executing many commissions for wealthy and cultured clients. American patrons often traveled to Italy to meet Rinehart and plan projects for their estates back in America. Rinehart's most important patron and sponsor was William T. Walters, founder of Baltimore's Walters Art Gallery (now the Walters Art Museum).

William Henry Rinehart left his estate in trust for the teaching of sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art. In his name, MICA established the Rinehart School of Sculpture and a Rinehart fellowship. The Rinehart School's alumni would one day include the estimable Hans Schuler, born the year Rinehart died.

Rinehart is buried in Baltimore's renowned Greenmount Cemetery.

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