Home - Humboldt Park, Chicago, IL
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member adgorn
N 41° 54.215 W 087° 41.861
16T E 442132 N 4639306
A sturdy, muscular miner wearing his lantern cap, has abandoned his lunch pail to stoop & hug his little daughter.
Waymark Code: WMT9HG
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 10/19/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
Views: 3

More from the Smithsonian site:
Other Titles: Miner and Child;Miner's Homecoming.

Dimensions: Sculpture: approx. 6 x 4 x 4 ft.; Base: approx. 3 ft. 11 in. x 6 ft. x 5 ft.
Inscription: (Inscription carved, raised on front of pedestal:) HOME

Remarks: Georgia Marble Company used work in advertising campaign. Work was originally exhibited in 1901 at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo.

Condition: Surveyed 1992 July. Treatment urgent.

From the Chicago Park District site (visit link) :
"An Irish immigrant who settled in Chicago in 1885, sculptor Charles J. Mulligan (1866–1916) was known for conveying a sense of humanism through his artworks. This sculpture, known as Home or Miner and Child, captures the dignity of the American workingman. It depicts a coal miner tenderly embracing his daughter after he returned home from a hard day of work. Mulligan first exhibited a temporary version of this sculpture at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York in 1901.

The West Park Commission displayed the temporary version of Home in a 1909 outdoor art exhibition in Garfield Park. A magazine article of the period explained that the exhibit was motivated by members of the Municipal Art League of Chicago, the West Park Commission’s Board, and officials of the Art Institute who believed that statues of war heroes did not belong in the parks. Under the direction of visionary landscape architect Jens Jensen, the outdoor exhibits in 1908 and 1909 were meant to present a “more fitting form of public art for the parks…the kind that has a decorative beauty appropriate to its site and surroundings, and a meaning in itself that the person of average intelligence may read without the aid of a guidebook.”

Home was so well received that in 1910 the West Park Board commissioned Mulligan to carve a permanent version of the sculpture in white Georgia marble. The following year, the park board installed the marble sculpture at the southeastern entrance of Humboldt Park. Unfortunately, Chicago’s freeze-thaw cycle and graffiti removal have taken their toll on Home and the integrity of the marble artwork has been greatly compromised. Mulligan also sculpted Lincoln the Rail-splitter in Garfield Park and the William McKinley Monument in McKinley Park which have both fared somewhat better because they were cast in bronze."
TITLE: Home

ARTIST(S): Mulligan, Charles J., 1866-1916, sculptor. Georgia Marble Company, contractor.

DATE: 1901. Installed in present location September 1911.

MEDIUM: Sculpture & Base: Georgia white marble.

CONTROL NUMBER: IAS IL000006

Direct Link to the Individual Listing in the Smithsonian Art Inventory: [Web Link]

PHYSICAL LOCATION:
In Humboldt Park near the corner of Division and California.


DIFFERENCES NOTED BETWEEN THE INVENTORY LISTING AND YOUR OBSERVATIONS AND RESEARCH:
The graffiti as depicted in the photos has been cleaned off. But as the Inventory says, it is in urgent need of treatment for preservation.


Visit Instructions:
Please give the date of your visit, your impressions of the sculpture, and at least ONE ORIGINAL PHOTOGRAPH. Add any additional information you may have, particularly any personal observations about the condition of the sculpture.
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