- Jonathan Scott Hartley
Jonathan Scott Hartley (
September 23 ,1845 - 1912), American sculptor, was born atAlbany, New York .He was a pupil of ED Palmer, New York, and of the schools of the Royal Academy, London; he later studied for a year in Berlin and for a year in Paris. His first important work (1882) was a statue of
Miles Morgan , the Puritan, forSpringfield, Massachusetts . Among his other works are the Daguerre monument in Washington; "Thomas K. Beecher," Elmira, New York, and "Alfred the Great," Appellate Court House, New York. He devoted himself particularly to the making of portrait busts, in which he attained high rank. In 1881 he became a member of theNational Academy of Design .He sculpted three of the nine busts around the front of the
Thomas Jefferson Building of theLibrary of Congress in Washington, DC. HisNathaniel Hawthorne , often mistaken forMark Twain , has pride of place in the ornate west front gallery of the original Library of Congress building, finished in 1897. He also sculpted theWashington Irving and theRalph Waldo Emerson . The Emerson bust is an exact likeness, as Hartley, and especially his supervisor,Ainsworth Rand Spofford , knew how prominent Emerson's nose actually was.References
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External links
* [http://encyclopedia.jrank.org/HAN_HEG/HARTLEY_JONATHAN_SCOTT_1845_.html Biography for "Jonathan Scott Hartley"]
Further reading
Durante, Dianne. Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide (New York University Press, 2007), Essay 2.
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