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Public Art: Living Values in Stone |
| Section: THE ARTS / PERSPECTIVES |
| Author: James F. Cooper |
| Publication:
The World & I Online |
| Issue Date: 1/1/1988 |
| Size: 3,107 Words, 19,031 Characters |
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In the year 1924, Homer Saint-Gaudens, then director of fine arts at the Carnegie Institute, addressed an audience of prominent citizens of Pittsburgh assembled in the institute's vast lecture hall. He was trying to summarize the great classical traditions that had guided his famous sculptor father Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907) in the creation of so many memorable American public monuments.
Homer Saint-Gaudens grappled earnestly that November evening with such concepts as Beauty, Truth, and Courage, sensitive to the fact that some in the audience were fidgeting in their seats. By then many of them were already aware of the new cultural influences from Europe, and the lecturer's ideas sounded quaintly old-fashioned.
Seated among the audience was an elderly sculptor, F.W. Ruckstull (1853-1942), a former friend of the deceased sculptor and himself the creator of many illustrious public monuments in Washington and New York. For Ruckstull, the speech afforded one last reaffirmation of the classical principles that had guided his own hand for so many decades.
Few among that audience, indeed in America, comprehended the danger that Ruckstull perceived so clearly in that distant year of 1924. To the great sculptor it appeared that a moral darkness was descending over America, a darkness that threatened to "smother the lamp of Beauty and Truth." To Ruckstull that darkness was Modernism, and in place of Beauty and Truth it offered Nihilism and Ugliness. During the decade following the New York Armory Exhibition of 1913, he had put aside his work in order to alert the public through his writings of the dangers of the coming cultural revolution. He was discouraged because few were listening.
Public art for Ruckstull and his generation represented a tradition of spiritual and moral enlightenment. Their inspiration was derived from the noble public art of ...
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... countries that have a strong cultural tradition. A nation unable to disseminate a code of morality or a cosmological sense of values to its youth perhaps does not deserve the privilege of surviving.
To paraphrase Samuel Morse, the aim of the nation is set by the artist. What is needed now is to find and encourage artists to create the kind of vision and values that elevate men's souls.
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Publication Details
(The World & I Online) |
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The World & I Online is a
comprehensive academic resource that encompasses a broad range of
articles by scholars and experts in the areas of Global Studies,
Liberal Arts, Fine & Applied Arts, General Science, and Spanish.
Originally published monthly in print as The World & I, our site
includes the complete contents since 1986 and continues to publish
a new issue online each month. |
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