- The Spirit of Life
Infobox Celebrity
name = The Spirit of Life
caption =Daniel Chester French "The Spirit of Life" is a sculpture by American sculptor
Daniel Chester French ."The Spirit of Life" began as a commission for a memorial to the famous Wall Street financier
Spencer Trask (1844-1909). Trask was a summer resident in Saratoga Springs, New York and a founder of the committee which was charged with renewing the city's reputation as a health resort. The commission for the monument came fromGeorge Foster Peabody who was a friend of Trask's.Henry Bacon , who collaborated with French on theLincoln Memorial , designed the setting for French's statue. [ [http://www.yeodoug.com/resources/dc_french/spirit_of_life/dcfrench_spirit_of_life.html Daniel Chester French: The Spirit of Life ] ]The statue stands in the heart of Congress Park in
Saratoga, New York , on a shallow niche of white marble with a balustraded terrace above and an oblong lagoon, set in marble and surrounded with verdant shrubbery, green lawns, and a wealth of flowers below. The statue is a figure of a winged woman, hands poised high above her head. The figure representsHygieia , the giver of health, who usually appeared in Greek and Roman art accompanying her father,Asklepios , the god of medicine. She is often shown offering nourishment to a serpent entwined on the staff Asklepios carries. In French's conception, Hygieia holds a shallow bowl aloft and in the other hand clasps a pine bough, a reference to the towering pines on the grounds of the Trasks' estate. The goddess is poised lightly on a rock, and a stream of water pours from its cleft. The pedestal is a sculptured reproduction of the tufaceous deposits seen about the orifice of many of Saratoga's famous springs. [Saratoga's Tribut to Spencer Trask; Unveiling of "The Spirit of Life," Completing the Memorial to Him, New York Times, June 27, 1915] Inscription on the statue reads "To do good and serve my fellow man." [ [http://www.saratogafoodgroup.com/spirit.htm The Spirit of Life ] ]"The Spirit of Life" is one of French's finest "active" statues. The flow of the angel's robe and the position of her right foot gives a great deal of motion. Several smaller castings of the statue were made and authorized by French; six were made between 1923 and 1931.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.