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Contents of Case 29: 17 objects

Sculpture case, Animals

The American Sculpture Collection
The Brooklyn Museum’s collection offers a lively survey of sculptural practice in North America and the Spanish American colonies over three centuries, in a variety of materials (predominantly marble and bronze) and a medley of styles. Most of the Museum’s American sculpture is now in the Visible Storage Study Center and the adjacent American Identities galleries.

From the Neoclassical marble females of Hiram Powers and Richard Greenough to Gaston Lachaise’s modernist bronze goddess, the full-length human figure has been a central preoccupation of many sculptors represented in the collection. For Spanish colonial carvers, it took the form of the devotional figure in wood, often embellished with painted surfaces and sometimes with more precious materials like ivory and silver. In contrast, twentieth-century modernist carvers, like Chaim Gross, preferred to leave the wooden surface of the figure in a natural state.

Portrait busts in stone, bronze, and even wood are among the most common sculptural forms here, with origins in antiquity. Whether conceived as private commemoration or as public icon, the portrait bust, like the painted portrait, served as the mainstay of many artists’ careers during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, executed in a spectrum of styles from realism to modernism. Most are about life-size, adding to their expressive power to commit a mortal human face to the permanence of bronze or stone.

Reliefs, another ancient form of sculpture in which figures project from a background, bring the two-dimensional illusionism of painting to the enduring medium of bronze or marble. Among the many sculptors represented in the collection, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Olin Levi Warner, and Helen Farnsworth Mears excelled at exploiting this pictorial quality, using delicate drawing and subtle modeling in their bronze portrait plaques. Some reliefs here are in the form of round or oval medallions, which recalled the coins and cameos of antiquity.

Brooklyn’s collection is rich in the work of American “animaliers,” later nineteenth- and early twentieth-century sculptors who specialized in bronze animal sculptures, usually executed on a small scale. These works portray highly naturalistic, usually wild, animals, often in vigorous action or combat. Once a model was created, usually in clay, multiple bronze casts could be made for a mass market eager to decorate domestic interiors. Some of these bronzes, like the small version of Alexander Phimister Proctor’s great pumas flanking the Ninth Street gate to Prospect Park in Brooklyn, are reduced-scale models of large outdoor sculptures.

Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf A (Sculpture)
14.589 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Princeton Tiger, 1908-1909

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Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf B (Sculpture)
13.1088 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Moose, ca. 1893

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32.1602 Edwin Willard Deming
Buffalo, 1908

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Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf C (Sculpture)
12.894 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Silver King, 1907

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12.896 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Puma, 1909

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14.565 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Buffalo, 1913

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Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf D (Sculpture)
12.895 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Elephant, or The Call, 1908

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13.14 Carl E. Akeley
The Wounded Comrade, 1913

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16.508 Carl E. Akeley
The Charging Herd, 1915

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Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf E (Sculpture)
12.897 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Elk, 1899

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12.899 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Setter, 1894

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13.1089 Alexander Phimister Proctor
Fawn, 1893

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32.2092.7 Emil Fuchs
Great Dane, 1893

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32.2092.13 Emil Fuchs
Wolfhound,

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32.2092.14 Emil Fuchs
Wolfhound,

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Visible Storage: Case 29, Shelf F (Sculpture)
54.158 Elie Nadelman
Resting Stag, ca. 1915

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1992.11.11 John B. Flannagan
Dragon Motif, 1932-1933

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