Philip Martiny

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Philip_Martiny an entity of type: Thing

Philip H. Martiny (May 19, 1858 – June 26, 1927) was a French-American sculptor who worked in the Paris atelier of , where he became foreman before emigrating to New York in 1878—to avoid conscription in the French army, he later claimed. In the United States he found work with Augustus Saint-Gaudens, with whom he remained five years; a fellow worker in Saint-Gaudens' shop was Frederick MacMonnies. A group photograph taken in Saint-Gaudens's studio about 1883, conserved in the Archives of American Art, shows Kenyon Cox, Richard Watson Gilder, Martiny, Francis Davis Millet, Saint-Gaudens, Julian Alden Weir and Stanford White. rdf:langString
Philip H. Martiny (Alsácia, 19 maio de 1858 - 1927) foi um escultor franco-americano que trabalhou no atelier Eugene Doca de Paris, onde se tornou chefe antes mudar-se para Nova Iorque em 1878 - para evitar ir para o exército da França. Nos Estados Unidos ele trabalhou com Augustus Saint-Gaudens, durante cinco anos. Martiny pertenceu a equipe de escultores do World's Columbian Exposition, em Chicago, no ano 1893, onde morou por um ano para trabalhar como escultor. Karl Bitter técnica de Martiny o caracterizou de: rdf:langString
rdf:langString Philip Martiny
rdf:langString Philip Martiny
rdf:langString Philip Martiny
rdf:langString Philip Martiny
rdf:langString New York City, New York, U.S.
xsd:date 1927-06-26
rdf:langString Strasbourg, France
xsd:date 1858-05-19
xsd:integer 17406116
xsd:integer 1103144507
xsd:date 1858-05-19
xsd:date 1927-06-26
rdf:langString
rdf:langString American
rdf:langString French
rdf:langString Philip H. Martiny (May 19, 1858 – June 26, 1927) was a French-American sculptor who worked in the Paris atelier of , where he became foreman before emigrating to New York in 1878—to avoid conscription in the French army, he later claimed. In the United States he found work with Augustus Saint-Gaudens, with whom he remained five years; a fellow worker in Saint-Gaudens' shop was Frederick MacMonnies. A group photograph taken in Saint-Gaudens's studio about 1883, conserved in the Archives of American Art, shows Kenyon Cox, Richard Watson Gilder, Martiny, Francis Davis Millet, Saint-Gaudens, Julian Alden Weir and Stanford White. He often worked in cooperation with architects in Beaux-Arts architecture. He lived in Bayside, Long Island, and had a sculpture studio in McDougal Alley, a fashionable former mews behind Washington Square Park. Much of his work is in New York City, though he provided bas-reliefs for the Art Institute of Chicago and for government buildings in Washington, DC. Martiny was one of the colony who gathered round Saint-Gaudens at Cornish, New Hampshire. Martiny was one of the large team of decorative sculptors assembled to carry out details for the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893, where he settled for a year to carry out the clay models for many somewhat facile decorative allegorical figures, cherubs, caryatids and the like. Karl Bitter diplomatically characterised Martiny's technique: He works with incredible rapidity and apparently with little reflection, but always with such an instinct for the right thing, decoratively speaking, that he rarely fails in his results The sculptures, which were carried out in staff, a weather-resistant plaster, were destroyed with the exhibition buildings, but the successful effect they produced led to further similar commissions at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York (1901) and the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St Louis (1904). His growing reputation led to his only medal, an award medal for the 1895 Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia. Though he was a member of the National Sculpture Society, Philip Martiny was not considered by his contemporaries as a sculptor of the first rank, and the assignation to him by the Tammany Hall architects given the plum project of completing designs for the New York City Hall of Records (later the Surrogate's Court) after the architect John R. Thomas's unexpected death in 1901, raised objections that tested the authority to accept or reject sculpture by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown and Martiny for the building. Daniel Chester French was called in to offer suggestions for improved subjects which Martiny finished in 1907. In the midst of the project Martiny was interviewed for The New York Times giving the first impression that Martiny operated a commercial sculpture factory "where Art rubs elbows cheerfully, indiscriminately, with Life's less romantic work" but ending with admiration for the sculptor's likeness of the late President McKinley. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philip Martiny. After the First World War, Martiny received two commissions for colossal figures commemorating the fallen soldiers: the Chelsea Park Memorial, at 28th Street and 9th Avenue and the memorial in Abingdon Square Park, where 8th Avenue commences. Martiny married twice and had eight children. A debilitating stroke ended his career, and a second one finished his life. His papers, compiled by Martiny's grandson, Raymond J. Linder, are conserved in the Archives of American Art, The Smithsonian Institution.
rdf:langString Philip H. Martiny (Alsácia, 19 maio de 1858 - 1927) foi um escultor franco-americano que trabalhou no atelier Eugene Doca de Paris, onde se tornou chefe antes mudar-se para Nova Iorque em 1878 - para evitar ir para o exército da França. Nos Estados Unidos ele trabalhou com Augustus Saint-Gaudens, durante cinco anos. Martiny pertenceu a equipe de escultores do World's Columbian Exposition, em Chicago, no ano 1893, onde morou por um ano para trabalhar como escultor. Karl Bitter técnica de Martiny o caracterizou de: Ele trabalha com uma rapidez incrível e, aparentemente, com pouca reflexão, mas sempre com o instinto para a coisa certa, decorativamente falando, que ele raramente falha em seus resultados" As esculturas em gesso, que fez com sua equipe, foram destruídas junto com o edifício da exposição, mas com o sucesso da exposição, levou Martiny a participar da Pan-American Exposition em Buffalo, Nova Iorque (1901) e para a Louisiana Purchase Exposition em St Louis (1904). Sua crescente reputação o levou receber o prêmio Cotton States and International Exposition em 1895, em Atlanta, na Geórgia. Embora ele fosse um membro da Sociedade Nacional de Escultura, Martiny não foi considerado um escultor da primeira ordem, mesmo após ele ter completado os trabalhos para o New York City Hall of Records, após a morte do arquiteto John R. Thomas. Daniel Chester French foi chamado para oferecer sugestões para a exposição que Martiny terminou em 1907. Martiny foi entrevistado pelo New York Times. Segundo o NY Times, a entrevista deu a impressão que ele operava uma fábrica de escultura comercial, onde a arte convive alegremente, indiscriminadamente, com a vida de trabalho menos romântica. No final da estrevista, Martiny declarou sua admiração com o presidente McKinley. Em 1921, Martiny criou o Abingdon Square Memorial, que foi dedicado aos soldados de Greenwich Village que estiveram na Primeira Guerra Mundial, que foi inaugurado diante de uma multidão de 20 mil pessoas. E também fez uma escultura no Chelsea Park Memorial. Martiny foi casado duas vezes e teve oito filhos. Um golpe debilitante encerrou sua carreira, e um segundo deu um fim a sua vida.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 9146
xsd:gYear 1858
xsd:gYear 1927

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