Sally James Farnham

Sally James Farnham

Sally James Farnham was an American sculptor born Ogdensburg, New York November 26, 1869 into a prominent local family.

Education

She was exposed to art as a child while touring the museums of Europe with her family. In 1896 she married Paulding Farnham, a designer at Tiffany & Co. and began modeling in 1901 while confined to a hospital bed. A family friend, Frederic Remington advised her to continue applying herself to the study of sculpture, which she did with the aid of several well-known sculptors, Henry Merwin Shrady, Augustus Lukeman and Frederick Roth.

Career

The ensuing years saw Farnham produce a series of United States Civil War and cemetery monuments in New York and New Jersey. In 1910 she was commissioned to create a frieze for the Pan American Union building in Washington D.C. This work contributed to her winning a commission from the government of Venezuela to execute the equestrian Simon Bolivar that now stands at the head of the Avenue of the Americas in New York City.

Sally Farnham died in New York City on April 28, 1943.

Major public commissions

Private memorials

External links