Alice Cooper (sculptor)

for the American rock singer, see Alice Cooper
Alice Cooper
Born (1875-04-08)April 8, 1875
Glenwood, Iowa
Died 1937
Nationality American
Education Art Institute of Chicago, Art Students League of New York
Known for Sculpture

Alice Cooper (April 8, 1875 – 1937) was an American sculptor.

Born in Glenwood, Iowa, and based in Denver, Colorado, Cooper studied under Preston Powers (son of the well-known sculptor Hiram Powers,[1]) then at the Art Institute of Chicago with Lorado Taft and the Art Students League of New York through about 1901.

Cooper is best known for her bronze figure of Sacajawea (Sacajawea and Jean-Baptiste) originally produced as the centerpiece for the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland, Oregon, 1905, unveiled in a ceremony attended by Susan B. Anthony and other prominent feminists.[2] This figure now stands in Washington Park.

Other work includes:

References

  1. Crane, Sylvia E., White Silence" Greenough, Powers and Crawford, American Sculptors in Nineteenth Century Italy, University of Miami Press, Coral Gabels, FL 1972 p. 266
  2. Lewis & Clark, Kris Fresonke, Mark David Spence
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