biography
| name: |
French, Daniel Chester
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1850–1931)
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| biography:
| Sculptor, born in Exeter, New Hampshire, USA. He grew up in Cambridge and Concord, MA, and studied anatomy with William Rimmer in Boston (early 1870s) and drawing with William Morris Hunt. He also studied briefly in New York City with John Quincy Adams Ward and then in Italy (1874). He returned to Washington, DC (1876) and became the most popular American sculptor of the period, known for his elegant academic and historical works, as in the ‘Minute Man’ (1873–5), the seated bronze of John Harvard (1882), and Abraham Lincoln (1918–22) in the Lincoln Memorial, Washington, DC. He was based in New York City after 1888 and at a summer home, Chesterwood, in Stockbridge, MA, which is now a museum exhibiting much of his work. |
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