Web Portraits: Home, Alexander Calder, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Henry Moore, Andy Warhol, Barbara Hepworth, Michelangelo, Philip Martiny, Bela Lyon Pratt, Donald De Lue, Prof. G. Besji, G. Ruggeri, Joe Brown, Randolph Rogers, Robert Delandre
Donald De Lue (1897-1988)
- Donald
De Lue Papers
- Department of Special Collections Syracuse University Library Syracuse, NY 13244
- American sculptor - Incoming and outgoing correspondence (1957-1964);
photographs of work (1941-1965); and published material by and about De Lue.
- Department of Special Collections Syracuse University Library Syracuse, NY 13244
- Book: The Sculpture of Donald De Lue Gods, Prophets, and Heroes
- D. Roger Howlett hc; 256 pages; 79 color, 210 b & w; 9 1/2 x 12 1/4
0879238208 Antique Collectors' Club
- The first monograph devoted to this great American figurative sculptor.
Lavishly illustrated in color and black and white, the book follows the artist
from the days of his apprenticeship in the Boston studios of Richard Recchia,
Bela Pratt, and Robert Baker to his last day in his Leonardo, New Jersey studio
- D. Roger Howlett hc; 256 pages; 79 color, 210 b & w; 9 1/2 x 12 1/4
0879238208 Antique Collectors' Club
- De Lue, Donald
(Harcourt) at Biography.Com
- De Lue, Donald (Harcourt) 1897 -- 1988
- Sculptor; born in Boston, Mass. He studied in Boston and Paris, established
a studio in New York City (1938), and lived in Leonardo, N.J. He is known for
his heroic and large sculptures, as in his bronze, The Rocket Thrower (1964--65).
- De Lue, Donald (Harcourt) 1897 -- 1988
- Philadelphia Public Art
@philart.net
- Justice and
Law - Photo Copyright 1998-2000 Chris Purdom
- Justice and Law II - Photo Copyright 1998-2000 Chris Purdom
- Justice and
Law - Photo Copyright 1998-2000 Chris Purdom
- Boston.com -
Boston Magazine - John Axelrod has spent much of his life acquiring and
dealing art. Now, his collection is so large it's spilling into museums. Lucky
museums.
- His new area of interest was pottery and ceramics, particularly a California
group called the Funk Artists. "I wanted to get away from wall things," he
recalls. His interests expanded to sculpture, and he eventually orchestrated a
wholesale sculpture venture with the artist Donald De Lue and
D. Roger Howlett, the president and owner of Childs Gallery on Newbury Street.
Axelrod even contributed to Howlett's book on the artist.
- His new area of interest was pottery and ceramics, particularly a California
group called the Funk Artists. "I wanted to get away from wall things," he
recalls. His interests expanded to sculpture, and he eventually orchestrated a
wholesale sculpture venture with the artist Donald De Lue and
D. Roger Howlett, the president and owner of Childs Gallery on Newbury Street.
Axelrod even contributed to Howlett's book on the artist.
- George Washington - Historian
General Larry D. McClanahan chronicles the amazing life of this remarkable
Virginian. (National Society, Sons of the
American Revolution web site)
- The Cover Photo captures this dramatic bronze statue depicting George
Washington at prayer at Valley Forge. It was a 1967 gift to the Freedoms
Foundations, which is located at Valley Forge, from the Free and Accepted Masons
of Pennsylvania. It was sculpted by the renowned artist Donald De
Lue and stands a majestic nine feet tall
- The Cover Photo captures this dramatic bronze statue depicting George
Washington at prayer at Valley Forge. It was a 1967 gift to the Freedoms
Foundations, which is located at Valley Forge, from the Free and Accepted Masons
of Pennsylvania. It was sculpted by the renowned artist Donald De
Lue and stands a majestic nine feet tall
- New
York 1964 World's Fair - Building Fair
- It was understood from the very beginning that official sanction by the
Paris based Bureau of International Expositions would not be forthcoming. Their
requirements that the fair take place within a single year and that each country
be given 5,000 square feet of space rent free could not be met. It became
difficult to persuade foreign nations to build national pavilions at the Fair.
- Contemporary art, other than for five official commissions for sculptures at
the Fair like Donald De Lue's "The Rocket Thrower," was not
sponsored by Fair officials.
- New
York 1964 World's Fair - Technology
- Even the Fair's Unisphere with its three satellite orbit rings, symbolized
the human emergence into space. Viewed from the edge of the pool, the Unisphere
had the dimensions Earth would have if viewed from a height of 6000 miles.
Nearby sculptures, "The Rocket Thrower: and "Forms in Space" were
symbols of the Space Age.
- Even the Fair's Unisphere with its three satellite orbit rings, symbolized
the human emergence into space. Viewed from the edge of the pool, the Unisphere
had the dimensions Earth would have if viewed from a height of 6000 miles.
Nearby sculptures, "The Rocket Thrower: and "Forms in Space" were
symbols of the Space Age.
- It was understood from the very beginning that official sanction by the
Paris based Bureau of International Expositions would not be forthcoming. Their
requirements that the fair take place within a single year and that each country
be given 5,000 square feet of space rent free could not be met. It became
difficult to persuade foreign nations to build national pavilions at the Fair.
- Jacksonville.com
Calendar Museums 05-14-99
- Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens: 829 Riverside Ave. ''Gods
Prophets, and Heroes: The Sculpture of Donald De Lue,''
drawings, maquettes and bronze sculptures through June 23. Museum hours: 10 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday (no admission charge 4 p.m. to 9 p.m on Tuesday
only); 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Friday and Saturday; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Closed Monday and major holidays. Admission: $6 for adults; $4, seniors and
military with ID.; $3 students; $1 children 5 and under; and free for members.
(904) 356-6857.
- Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens: 829 Riverside Ave. ''Gods
Prophets, and Heroes: The Sculpture of Donald De Lue,''
drawings, maquettes and bronze sculptures through June 23. Museum hours: 10 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday (no admission charge 4 p.m. to 9 p.m on Tuesday
only); 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Friday and Saturday; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Closed Monday and major holidays. Admission: $6 for adults; $4, seniors and
military with ID.; $3 students; $1 children 5 and under; and free for members.
(904) 356-6857.
- The Cummer Museum of Art &
Gardens - Jacksonville, FL
- 1999: May 6-August 29: "Gods, Prophets and Heroes: The Sculptures of Donald De Lue"
- Current Exhibitions - April 29 –
June 24 Gods, Prophets, and Heroes: The Sculpture of Donald De Lue Organized by
Copley Square Exhibition Services in cooperation with the Childs Gallery
- Antiques and Art Around Florida - A&ARF - Museum Schedule North Florida
- 1999: May 6-August 29: "Gods, Prophets and Heroes: The Sculptures of Donald De Lue"
- Childs Gallery - A
Guide to Boston Art. The sculpture department has works in figurative
bronze from the late 19th century to the 1980s; work by Donald De
Lue, Walker Hancock and Albert Wien are specialties.
- Donald De Lue Photo
- "Spirit of American Youth", American (1897-1988), 36", bronze / 1952, Edition
of 12, This is the study which was approved for the 22 foot high figure at
the Omaha Beach Memorial in Normandy , France
- Donald De Lue Photo
- "Spirit of American Youth", American (1897-1988), 36", bronze / 1952, Edition
of 12, This is the study which was approved for the 22 foot high figure at
the Omaha Beach Memorial in Normandy , France
- Spirit Triumphant
Statue
- The director of the U.S. Civil War Center at LSU pledged last fall that
Louisiana would be the first state to raise the funds to restore its bronze
monument at Gettysburg National Battlefield in Pennsylvania.
- Sculpted by Donald De Lue, Louisiana's 24-ft. monument has
as its central figure an angel, the "Spirit Triumphant," symbolizing the spirit
of survival for a once-divided nation and the hope for a country again united.
The eternal flame held in one hand symbolizes that the dead are never forgotten.
She blows a clarion, held in her other hand, to assure the unknown dead who fell
in battle that they are not forgotten, even in their anonymity. At the base of
the monument lies the figure of a fallen cannoneer of the Washington Artillery,
covered with a Confederate battle flag.
- The director of the U.S. Civil War Center at LSU pledged last fall that
Louisiana would be the first state to raise the funds to restore its bronze
monument at Gettysburg National Battlefield in Pennsylvania.
- Coleville
American Military Cemetery
- The Memorial consists of a semi-circular colonnade with a loggia at each
end. On the platform is a 22 foot bronze statue, the "Spirit of American Youth",
a tribute to those who gave their lives in these operations. Around its base is
the inscription:
- MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY OF THE COMING OF THE
LORD.
- MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY OF THE COMING OF THE
LORD.
- The sculptor was Donald De Lue of New York City.
- On the walls within the south loggia are 3 battle maps engraved in the stone
and embellished with coloured enamels. These maps were designed by Robert Foster
of New York City from data furnished by the American Battle Monuments
Commission. They were executed by Maurice Schmit of Paris.
- American
Battle Monuments Commission
- At the entrance to each loggia are two large bronze urns, also designed and
sculptured in high relief by Donald De Lue and cast by Marinelli foundry of
Florence, Italy. There are two identical pairs. On the face of one urn a dying
warrior holding the sword with which he has fought the good fight is astride a
charging horse which symbolizes War. The Angel of the Lord supports him and
receives his spirit. On the reverse side of this urn a woman kneels, holding her
child, beside the wreath-decorated grave of a soldier. About them shines the
Star of Eternal Life. This composition is dedicated to the sacrifices and
hardships of the women and children bereaved by war. The laurel leaf design
around the top is symbolic of Victory and Honor.
- On one side of the other urn, a figure represents the Lord as related in
Genesis, Chapter I: "The spirit of the Lord moved on the face of the waters".
The spray of laurel, on the representation of the waters, recalls to memory
those who lost their lives at sea. The rainbow is the symbol of hope and peace.
The reverse side of this urn shows a figure of an angel pushing away the
stonesymbolic of resurrection and eternal life.
- At the entrance to each loggia are two large bronze urns, also designed and
sculptured in high relief by Donald De Lue and cast by Marinelli foundry of
Florence, Italy. There are two identical pairs. On the face of one urn a dying
warrior holding the sword with which he has fought the good fight is astride a
charging horse which symbolizes War. The Angel of the Lord supports him and
receives his spirit. On the reverse side of this urn a woman kneels, holding her
child, beside the wreath-decorated grave of a soldier. About them shines the
Star of Eternal Life. This composition is dedicated to the sacrifices and
hardships of the women and children bereaved by war. The laurel leaf design
around the top is symbolic of Victory and Honor.
- The Memorial consists of a semi-circular colonnade with a loggia at each
end. On the platform is a 22 foot bronze statue, the "Spirit of American Youth",
a tribute to those who gave their lives in these operations. Around its base is
the inscription:
- National Sculpture Society, Sculpture Review March 1952 Past Issues
- Modern vs. Non-Modern "He is thoroughly grounded on contemporary
art, and with him we would have exhibits by such men as Wayman Adams, John C.
Johansen, Leopold Seyffert, Sidney E. Dickenson, Leon Kroll, Vaughn Flannery,
Nicolai Fechin, Robert Brachman, and many more. We would see sculpture by
Wheeler Williams, Donald De Lue, Paul Manship, James Earle
Fraser and his wife, Laura Gardin Fraser, Cecil Howard, and Polasek. For the
first time since 1920 the Chicago Art Institute would admit and support the fact
that there are two schools of contemporary art in the United States, one
stemming from war-torn Europe, the modern, and one growing out of the couragious
and honest soil of America, the non-modern...." Eleanor Jewett
- Modern vs. Non-Modern "He is thoroughly grounded on contemporary
art, and with him we would have exhibits by such men as Wayman Adams, John C.
Johansen, Leopold Seyffert, Sidney E. Dickenson, Leon Kroll, Vaughn Flannery,
Nicolai Fechin, Robert Brachman, and many more. We would see sculpture by
Wheeler Williams, Donald De Lue, Paul Manship, James Earle
Fraser and his wife, Laura Gardin Fraser, Cecil Howard, and Polasek. For the
first time since 1920 the Chicago Art Institute would admit and support the fact
that there are two schools of contemporary art in the United States, one
stemming from war-torn Europe, the modern, and one growing out of the couragious
and honest soil of America, the non-modern...." Eleanor Jewett
- SPARTY
and the Figurative Tradition in Sculpture
- Sculpture representing the human form may be referred to as "figurative."
Figurative sculpture may be relatively realistic or more stylized. Other artists
in America working in the figurative tradition--whether realistic or
stylized--in the first third of the 20th century included sculptors like Donald De Lue, Anna Hyatt Huntington, Malvina Hoffman, Paul
Manship, Carl Milles, and Marshall Fredericks, to name only a few. Some, like
Milles, who had worked with Rodin, brought European traditions with them. Other
sculptors like Manship and Lee Lawrie, whose work includes THE SOWER on Beaumont
Tower, went beyond the realistic into the Moderne or Deco idiom, while remaining
in the figurative tradition. By the 1940s and 50s, however, the realistic mode
was largely eclipsed. Jungwirth [Leonard D.] was one of the exceptions.
- Today, however, there has been a resurgence in figurative sculpture. Artists
like Frederick Hart continue in the realistic tradition, and magazines like Sculpture Review and American Art Quarterly focus exclusively on
the representational. Artists from other countries, such as Antonio Lopez Garcia
of Spain and Ousmane Sow of Senegal, use the figure in a more stylized mode. A
major exhibition of the 1995 Biennale di Venezia was "Identity and Alterity:
Figures of the Body 1895/1995." The human form in art continues to fascinate,
compel--and sometimes provoke--the artist and the viewer
- Sculpture representing the human form may be referred to as "figurative."
Figurative sculpture may be relatively realistic or more stylized. Other artists
in America working in the figurative tradition--whether realistic or
stylized--in the first third of the 20th century included sculptors like Donald De Lue, Anna Hyatt Huntington, Malvina Hoffman, Paul
Manship, Carl Milles, and Marshall Fredericks, to name only a few. Some, like
Milles, who had worked with Rodin, brought European traditions with them. Other
sculptors like Manship and Lee Lawrie, whose work includes THE SOWER on Beaumont
Tower, went beyond the realistic into the Moderne or Deco idiom, while remaining
in the figurative tradition. By the 1940s and 50s, however, the realistic mode
was largely eclipsed. Jungwirth [Leonard D.] was one of the exceptions.
- The Municipal Art Society -
Public Art Adopt-A-Monument
- [Photo] A commitment
to preserving community history marks the sponsorship of The Rocket
Thrower by Donald De Lue in Flushing Meadows - Corona
Park, Queens. The Promethean figure was commissioned for the 1964 World’s Fair
as a symbol of space exploration. Funding came from the Queens Borough
President, the Queens Heritage Foundation and the Drackett Company. The project
was embraced by Queens Borough President Claire Shulman, whose daughter happens
to be an astronaut! The restoration will take place this summer.
- [Photo] A commitment
to preserving community history marks the sponsorship of The Rocket
Thrower by Donald De Lue in Flushing Meadows - Corona
Park, Queens. The Promethean figure was commissioned for the 1964 World’s Fair
as a symbol of space exploration. Funding came from the Queens Borough
President, the Queens Heritage Foundation and the Drackett Company. The project
was embraced by Queens Borough President Claire Shulman, whose daughter happens
to be an astronaut! The restoration will take place this summer.
- Queens Courier
- Queens L, M - Monuments: "ROCKET THROWER" — 1964, Donald De Lue, Bronze
Statue, granite pedestal. Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.
- Queens L, M - Monuments: "ROCKET THROWER" — 1964, Donald De Lue, Bronze
Statue, granite pedestal. Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.
- Airbrush Action
- Artist Robert Rodriguez
- The style indeed originated out of his passion for sculpture. In the first
four or five illustrations that Rodriguez did while developing this look, he
painted as if the subjects were made of white marble. On vacation in Europe, he
can be found snapping photos of works by Paul Manship, Donald De
Lue, the Martel brothers, and other great sculptors of the period.
Asked if he's ever been tempted to try sculpting himself, Rodriguez admits that
he's got the clay, and one of these days he's going to get around to it.
- The style indeed originated out of his passion for sculpture. In the first
four or five illustrations that Rodriguez did while developing this look, he
painted as if the subjects were made of white marble. On vacation in Europe, he
can be found snapping photos of works by Paul Manship, Donald De
Lue, the Martel brothers, and other great sculptors of the period.
Asked if he's ever been tempted to try sculpting himself, Rodriguez admits that
he's got the clay, and one of these days he's going to get around to it.
- LC Library New
Acquisitions - January 1999
- NB 237.D44 H69 1990 The sculpture of Donald De Lue : gods, prophets, and heroes / by D. Roger Howlett ; with contributions by Joseph Veach Noble ... [et al].
- Smithsonian
Institution Research Information System - Entries for author=de lue
- To get detail for each item, go to SIRIS,
click Art Inventories on the left. When the search page comes up, enter de lue in the search box, select author and press search.
- Also:
- Related?
- Courier Gazette Happenings 11/22/96 issue By Carolyn Adriaansen (926-4436)
- Thanks! from the family of Donald De Lue to those who remembered them with
cards, flowers, prayers and other remembrances. It was greatly appreciated.
- Thanks! from the family of Donald De Lue to those who remembered them with
cards, flowers, prayers and other remembrances. It was greatly appreciated.
- Leonard William De Lue articles - born: March 31, 1907 - died: Abt. 1973
- One of the most colorful careers in the police and crime investigation
history of the Rocky Mountain region was ended yesterday when Leonard De Lue,
66, founder and head of the De Lue Detective agency, died in the Mayo Hospital
at Rochester, Minn
- De Lue Family Pictures
- One of the most colorful careers in the police and crime investigation
history of the Rocky Mountain region was ended yesterday when Leonard De Lue,
66, founder and head of the De Lue Detective agency, died in the Mayo Hospital
at Rochester, Minn
Artist: De Lue, Donald, 1897-1988, | ||
Title | Owner | Call Number |
(Stations of the Cross), (sculpture). | Sisters of St. Joseph Willowdale, Toronto, Ontario, | 76005812 |
(White Bronze Plaque), (sculpture). | Interchurch Center, New York, New York | 63910003 |
American Eagle, (sculpture). | Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston, Massachusetts | 76009533 |
Apex Group, (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76005813 |
Arcturus, (sculpture). | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts | 20490061 |
Athelete, (sculpture). | United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland | 76009537 |
Benjamin Franklin and Josiah Willard Gibbs, (sculpture). | Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | 76009530 |
Boy Scout Memorial, (sculpture). | United States Department of the Interior, Washington, District of Columbia | 76009553 |
Brookgreen Gardens Medal 1978-1979, (sculpture). | Brookgreen Gardens, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina | 64300048 |
Creation, (sculpture). | Junior High School, New York, New York | 76009535 |
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., (sculpture). | Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas | 88410048 |
Eagles, (sculpture). | United States Court House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 76009528 |
Edward Hull Crump Memorial, (sculpture). | City of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee | 76009532 |
Eve, (sculpture). | Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery, Nashville, Tennessee | 49670010 |
Family Group, (sculpture). | Christian Herald Building, New York, New York | 76009539 |
Faun, (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76005809 |
Faun, (sculpture). | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts | 20490038 |
Federal Reserve Bank Door: The New England States, (sculpture). | Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston, Massachusetts | 76009534 |
Fisherman, (sculpture). | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts | 20490062 |
France, (sculpture). | U. S. Battle Monument, St. Laurent, Normandy, | 76009550 |
General George Washington Kneeling in Prayer, (sculpture). | Freedom Foundation, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania | 76009554 |
George Washington as Master Mason, (sculpture). | City of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan | MI000399 |
George Washington Kneeling in Prayer, (sculpture). | George Washington Memorial Park, Paramus, New Jersey | NJ000549 |
George Washington Monument, (sculpture). | City of New York, New York, New York | NY000098 |
George Washington, (sculpture). | George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Alexandria, Virginia | 54340001 |
George Washington, (sculpture). | State of Indiana, Indianapolis, Indiana | IN000005 |
George Washington, (sculpture). | Masonic Home and Hospital, Wallingford, Connecticut | CT000004 |
George Washington, (sculpture). | State of Michigan, Lansing, Michigan | MI000621 |
George Washington, (sculpture). | Museum of Our National Heritage, Lexington, Massachusetts | 87740207 |
Head of Corpus, (sculpture). | Sisters of St. Joseph Willowdale, Toronto, Ontario, | 76009547 |
Icarus, (sculpture). | Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia | 8580522 |
Icarus, (sculpture). | Brookgreen Gardens, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina | 76009542 |
Law and Justice (2 panels), (sculpture). | United States Department of General Services, Washington, District of Columbia | 76009527 |
Life and Healing, (sculpture). | Abraham Jacobi Hospital, New York | 76009538 |
Lions of Judah, (sculpture). | Germantown Jewish Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 76009548 |
Memorial Urn, (sculpture). | City Hall, Stockholm, | 76009543 |
National Academy of Design: 150th Anniversary Medallion, (sculpture). | National Academy of Design, New York, New York | 36270052 |
Normandy Beach Head Figure, (sculpture). | U. S. Battle Monument, St. Laurent, Normandy, | 76005808 |
Nymph, (sculpture). | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts | 20490039 |
Nymph, (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76005807 |
Penelope, (sculpture). | National Academy of Design, New York, New York | 36270051 |
Quest Eternal, (sculpture). | City of Boston, Boston, Massachusetts | 87740063 |
Quest Eternal, (sculpture). | City of Orlando, Orlando, Florida | FL000351 |
Rocket Thrower, (sculpture). | City of Orlando, Orlando, Florida | FL000634 |
Shelley Hayden Memorial, (sculpture). | Located | 76009544 |
Society of Medalists - 56th Issue, (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76009526 |
Soldiers and Sailors of the Confederacy, (sculpture). | United States Department of the Interior, Washington, District of Columbia | 76005811 |
Spirit of American Youth, (sculpture). | Brookgreen Gardens, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina | 64300047 |
St. Francis, (sculpture). | Located California | 76009546 |
St. Michael and a Knight Crusader (2 Figures), (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76009524 |
St. Michael Triptychs, (sculpture). | Citizens Committee of the Army and Navy | 76009540 |
Stations of the Cross (14), (sculpture). | Loyola Seminary, Shrub Oak, New York | 76009536 |
The Alchemist, (sculpture). | University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 76009541 |
The Atom, (sculpture). | Unlocated. | 76009525 |
The Death of St. Joseph, (sculpture). | Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Illinois | 76009545 |
The Mountaineer, (sculpture). | West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia | WV000033 |
The Rocket Thrower, (sculpture). | City of New York, New York, New York | 76002360 |
Thomas Jefferson, (sculpture). | Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas | 88410047 |
Thomas Jefferson, (sculpture). | Jefferson Parish, Harahan, Louisiana | LA000146 |
Triton Fountain, (sculpture). | Federal Reserve Bank, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 76009529 |
U. S. Battle Monument Urn: The Spirit of the Lord Moved Over the Face of the Waters, (sculpture). | U. S. Battle Monument, St. Laurent, Normandy, | 76009549 |
U.S. Battle Monument Urns, (sculpture). | U. S. Battle Monument, St. Laurent, Normandy, | 76005810 |
United States, (sculpture). | U. S. Battle Monument, St. Laurent, Normandy, | 76009551 |
Untitled, (sculpture). | University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, North Carolina | 39210021 |
War Memorial Chapel pieces, (sculpture). | Virginia PolyTechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia | 75008308 |
Washington, (sculpture). | City of New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana | 88350035 |
What is Man That Thou Art Mindful of Him, (sculpture). | Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts | 20780185 |
Artist: | Fraser, James Earle, 1876-1953, sculptor. De Lue, Donald, 1897-1988, sculptor. Gugler, Eric, designer. |
Title: | The Harvey S. Firestone Memorial, (sculpture). |
Date: | 1950. Dedicated Aug. 3, 1950. |
Medium: | Portrait of Firestone: bronze; Relief panels: granite; Base: granite. |