- John Quincy Adams Ward
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = John Quincy Adams Ward
imagesize =
caption = John Quincy Adams Ward, circa 1900
birthname =
birthdate = birth date |1830|6|29|
location =Urbana, Ohio
deathdate = death date and age |1910|5|1|1830|6|29|
deathplace =
nationality = American
field =Sculpture
training =
movement =
works =
patrons =
influenced by =Henry Kirke Brown
influenced =
awards =John Quincy Adams Ward (
June 29 ,1830 –May 1 ,1910 ) was an American sculptor, who is most familiar for his over-lifesize standing statue ofGeorge Washington on the steps ofFederal Hall in Wall Street.Early Years
He was born in
Urbana, Ohio , a city that had been founded by his grandfather Col. William Ward, and went to live with his sister inBrooklyn, New York , where he trained under the well-established sculptorHenry Kirke Brown , who carved "J.Q.A. Ward, asst." on his equestrian monument of George Washington inUnion Square . Ward went to Washington in 1857, where he made a name with portrait busts of men in public life. In 1861 he worked for theAmes Sword Company of Chicopee, Massachusetts, providing models for decorative objects including gilt-bronze sword hilts for the Union Army. Ames also was one of the largest brass, bronze and iron foundries in the US. [ [http://www.amessword.com/ Ames Sword Company history] ]Ward set up a studio in
New York City in 1861 and was elected to theNational Academy of Design the following year ; he was its president from 1874. In 1882 a new New York studio on 52nd Street Street was designed for him by his friend,Richard Morris Hunt who was to collaborate with him on many projects over the years.Career
Nineteenth-century American commissions for sculpture were largely confined to portrait busts and monuments, where Ward was preeminent in his generation. Sculptors also made a living selling bronze reductions of their public works; Ward made use of new
galvanoplastic duplicating techniques; many of Ward's reductions and galvanoplastic and die-stamped relief panels survive.In 1903, with the collaboration of
Paul Wayland Bartlett , he made the models for the marble pediment sculptures for theNew York Stock Exchange . The pediment was carved by thePiccirilli Brothers .Ward was a founder and president of the
National Sculpture Society (1893–1904) and president of theNational Academy of Design (1874).He died in 1910. A copy of his "Indian Hunter" stands at his gravesite in Urbana. [ [http://www.sculpturecenter.org/oosi/sculpture.asp?SID=603 Ohio Outdoor Sculpture Inventory] .] His sketchbooks are conserved at the
Albany Institute of History & Art .Public Sculpture
* 1864 "Indian Hunter",
Central Park ,New York City
* 1867 "The Good Samaritan" Sculpture, Ether Monument,Boston Public Garden ,Boston, MA
* 1869 [The bronze is signed J.Q.A. WARD 1869] Seventh Regiment Memorial,Central Park ,New York City . The bronze of a standing Union soldier is set on a high granite pedestal along the West Carriage Drive at 69th Street. Actor and dramatistSteele MacKaye , who served in the 7th Regiment, was its model.
* 1878 GeneralGeorge H. Thomas Monument,Thomas Circle ,Washington, DC
* 1871 Major GeneralJohn F. Reynolds Statue,Gettysburg National Military Park ,Gettysburg, PA
* 1881 "Victory" Statue, Yorktown Victory Monument,Yorktown, VA
* 1882George Washington Statue,Federal Hall ,New York City
* 1884 "The Pilgrim" Statue,Central Park ,New York City
* 1887James A. Garfield Monument , Capitol Hill,Washington, D.C.
* 1893 GovernorHorace Fairbanks ,St. Johnsbury Athenaeum ,St. Johnsbury, VT Gallery
Trivia
*He was married three times.
*J.Q.A. Ward's brother Edgar Melville Ward was a notable artist in his own right, a realist painter specializing in character studies of working folk, who was the director of theNational Academy of Design in New York for over twenty years..Notes
Further reading
*
Lorado Taft , "History of American Sculpture" (New York, 1905)
*Adeline Adams , "J. Q. A. Ward, An Appreciation" (New York, 1911)
* ——, "John Quincy Adams Ward" (New York, 1912)
*Sharp, Lewis I., "John Quincy Adams Ward, dean of American sculpture: with a catalogue raisonnée." (Newark: University of Delaware, 1985)
* Durante, Dianne, "Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide" (New York University Press, 2007): description and discussion of Ward's Washington, Greeley, Holley, Conkling, Dodge, and Shakespeare, all in New York, with a list of Ward's other works in the 5 Boroughs.External links
* [http://www.library.ohiou.edu/archives/mss/mss004.pdf Ohio University, J.Q.A. Ward collection] Photographs of his studio, works, friends, etc. Correspondence etc. (pdf file)
* [http://www.remarkableohio.org/index.cfm?action=search_markers.marker_details&marker_id=1076 Ohio historical markers]
* [http://albanyinstitute.org Albany Institute of History & Art]
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