
The Arts of Peace: Music and Harvest - Washington, DC
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 38° 53.387 W 077° 03.131
18S E 322014 N 4306547
Music and Harvest and Pegasus
Waymark Code: WMW9KT
Location: District of Columbia, United States
Date Posted: 07/30/2017
Views: 3
County of statue: District of Columbia
Location of statue: Lincoln Circle, entrance to Rock Creek Parkway, Washington
Artist: James Earle Fraser, 1876-1953, sculptor
Carver: V. Tonelli
Architect: William Mitchell Kendall
Architect:
McKim, Mead & White, architectural firm
Founder:
Fonderia Bruno
Contractor: North Carolina Granite Corporation
Monument Text:
(Rear of Bronze Statue Base):
A. BRVNI FUSE ROMA
(Front Base):
ASPIRATION AND LITERATURE
JAMES EARL FRASER.SCULPTOR
CAST IN BRONZE.ROME 1950
A GIFT FROM THE PEOPLE OF ITALY
TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES.
Proper Description: A male and a female figure flank the winged horse, Pegasus. Harvest on the left is represented by a male figure with a bundle of wheat; Music on the right is represented by a female figure holding a harp. The rectangular base is adorned with a row of thirty-six stars and a wreath. The thirty-six stars represent the number of states in the Union, at the time prior to the Civil War." ~ Smithsonian American Art Museum
Remarks: "This sculpture and its companion, "Aspirations and Literature" (IAS 77002780) were commissioned in 1925 originally in granite per McKim, Mead & White's overall designs for Memorial Bridge. Funding for the sculptures was impounded under the Economy Act of 1933. When funds were released, the cost of granite had increased so much that marble and later bronze was selected. Since bronze was a critical war material the execution of the sculptures was delayed again. Finally, in 1949, Italy agreed to cast the sculptures as a gift to the U. S. in appreciation for post-war aid. The sculpture was gilded using the rare "mercury gilding" process. The carving of the base was designed by William Mitchell Kendall of McKim, Mead & White. The wreath was carved by V. Tonelli, a local stonecarver. North Carolina Granite Corporation furnished and erected the base." ~ Smithsonian American Art Museum