The Solitude of the Soul by Lorado Taft at AIC by tomburtonwood 3d model
3dmdb logo
Thingiverse
The Solitude of the Soul by Lorado Taft at AIC by tomburtonwood

The Solitude of the Soul by Lorado Taft at AIC by tomburtonwood

by Thingiverse
Last crawled date: 3 years ago
Lorado Taft
American, 1860-1936
The Solitude of the Soul, modeled in plaster 1901; sculpted in marble 1914
Marble
h. 231.1 cm; base 129.5 x 105.4 cm (91 in.; base 51 x 41 1/2 in.)
Signed: "Lorado Taft Sc 1914"
Friends of American Art Collection, 1914.739
American Art
Gallery 161
The Neoclassicism of the sculptors Harriet Hosmer and Randolph Rogers was replaced in the second half of the 19th century by the more realistic naturalism of French-trained sculptors such as Lorado Taft. An instructor in modeling at the School of the Art Institute for 20 years, Taft created public monuments for Chicago that made the city a center for sculpture. The figures in this work are only partly freed from the marble, a technique that emphasizes the mass and outline of the stone. Explaining The Solitude of the Soul, Taft wrote, “The thought is the eternally present fact that however closely we may be thrown together by circumstances . . . we are unknown to each other.”
http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/artwork/70466?search_no=3&index=0
123D Catch by Yasmine Afshar

Tags