Artist | Lorado Taft |
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Year | 1929 |
Type | Bronze Relief |
Dimensions | 126.4 cm × 81 cm × 1.3 cm (49.75 in × 32 in × .5 in) |
Location | Indiana Statehouse, Indianapolis |
Owner | Indiana Statehouse |
Frances Elizabeth Willard is a public artwork designed by American artist Lorado Taft,[1] located in the rotunda of the Indiana State House, in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. It is a bronze plaque, given by the Women's Christian Temperance Union, commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of Frances Elizabeth Willard's election as President of the WCTU.[2]
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This bronze plaque measures 32 inches wide, 49 3/4 inches tall, and 1/2 inch deep. It has an inscription at the top and an inscription at the bottom. A right side profile relief of Frances Elizabeth Willard is between the two inscriptions. She is depicted wearing a dress with leg-o-mutton sleeves and a high lace neck. Her hair is pulled back into a bun.[2]
The inscription on the top of the plaque reads:
In honor of one who made the world widerfor women and more homelike for humanity
Frances Elizabeth Willard
Intrepid Pathfinder and beloved leader
of the National and World's
Woman's Christian Temperance Union
The inscription on the bottom of the plaque reads:
Placed September 22-1929 by theNational W-C-T-U to commemorate the
Fiftieth Anniversary of Frances Willard's
Election as President in the city of
Indianapolis Indiana October 31-1879
The artist's signature is located on the front, proper left, bottom of the relief. It reads, "Lorado Taft Sc. 1929." The plaque is in excellent condition.[2]
This plaque is located in the Indiana Statehouse Rotunda on the main floor.[2]
In 1968, there were new rules proposed to Governor Roger D. Branigin by Hubert H. Hawkins, director of the Indiana Historical Bureau, Mrs. Floyd Hopper, head of the Indiana Division in the Indiana State Library, and Robert D. Starrett, curator of the Indiana State Museum regarding the display of paintings, busts, plaques and other memorials within the Indiana Statehouse. The guidelines were created to ensure a stable and continuous policy prevail when choosing the artwork to be displayed in the Statehouse.[3]
If these guidelines were accepted, which they were not, the Frances Elizabeth Willard plaque would have been removed, along with the Sarah T. Bolton plaque.[3]
Recommended guidelines included:[3]
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