Widener Gold Medal
The George D. Widener Memorial Gold Medal was an award for sculpture established in 1912 by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
The award recognizes the "most meritorious work of Sculpture modeled by an American citizen and shown in the Annual Exhibition".[1] Widener was a businessman and director of the Academy who died on the RMS Titanic.
Recipients of the Academy's Widener Gold Medal have included:
- Charles Grafly (1913)
- Paul Manship (1914)
- Albin Polasek (1915)
- Edward McCartan (1916)
- Attilio Piccirilli (1917)[2]
- Albert Laessle (1918) [3]
- Malvina Hoffman (1920)
- Walker Hancock (1925)
- Katherine Lane Weems (1926)
- Mitchell Fields (1930)
- Heinz Warneke (1935)[4]
- Vincent Glinsky (1936)
- Anna Hyatt Huntington (1937)
- Henry Kreis (1942)[5]
- Cecil de Blaquiere Howard (1943)[6]
- Jacques Lipchitz (1952)
- Kahlil Gibran (1958)
- Leonard Baskin (1965)
- Lee Bontecou
- Oronzio Maldarelli
- Theodore Roszak[7]
References
- ↑ Catalogue of the annual exhibition, Volume 112 By Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
- ↑ Catalogue of the annual exhibition, Volume 112 By Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
- ↑ Sculpture of Brookgreen Gardens By Robin R. Salmon
- ↑ "Wild Boars". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved February 24, 2014.
- ↑ The American Catholic who's who, Volume 7 By Georgina Pell Curtis, Benedict Elder
- ↑ National Sculpture Review, vol. 5, number 3, fall 1956, p.6.
Page en the french Wikipedia : Cecil Howard - ↑ Ebony Magazine, June 1964, page 113
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