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The Closing Era is a bronze sculpture of a Native American hunter standing over a dying bison, installed on the East side of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver. [1] [2] The statue was created by Preston Powers, the son of famous sculptor Hiram Powers and "represents the end of the traditional lifestyle of Native Americans in Colorado". [3]
bronze cast version (1890) in Davis Museum at Wellesley College: Woman's Building: [17] Leif Ericson [18] bronzed plaster 1889 National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C. The original bronze (1885–87) is in Boston, Massachusetts. A bronze replica (1887) is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Woman's Building: Bust of Lucy Stone [19] marble 1893
The sculpture garden was created at the direction of Donald M. Kendall, who was chief executive officer of PepsiCo when the company moved in 1970 from Manhattan to the 168-acre (0.68 km 2) site in suburban Purchase. Kendall "sought to create an atmosphere of stability, creativity and experimentation.
Figure for Landscape is a bronze sculpture by Barbara Hepworth, modeled in 1960.. Seven castings were made; they are in the Barbara Hepworth Museum (Tate St Ives), [1] Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, University of Exeter, [2] J. Paul Getty Museum, [3] [4] the San Diego Museum of Art. and Stavanger Kunstforening, Norway.
The Umlauf Sculpture Garden & Museum, stylized as the UMLAUF, is a museum and outdoor sculpture garden centered on the artistic works of American sculptor Charles Umlauf. Located at 605 Azie Morton Road in the Zilker neighborhood of Austin, Texas , the garden is adjacent to Austin's Zilker Park .
Boyle's bronze sculpture, Stone Age in America, completed in 1887 and now on display at the Ellen Philips Memorial Sculpture Garden in Philadelphia Boyle's time in Paris established him as a successful, medaled ornament to the Salon, the official art exhibition of the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris (the École being the visual arts division of the Académie).