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Puck
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Artist: Harriet Hosmer
Period: 1856
Material: Marble
Location: Walker Art Gallery
Dimensions: statue: 77 cm; pedestal: 78.9 cm; base: 22.2 cm; plinth: 15 cm
Scanned: 2016
Scanner: Artec Spider
This marble sculpture of ‘Puck’, the mischievous sprite of Shakespeare’s (1564 – 1616) ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, was the American artist Harriet Hosmer’s most popular work. Hosmer was one of the most successful female artists of the 19th century. Born in Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1830, she spent most of her life living and working in Rome. There she was a leading figure in an important group of women artists who expressed their feminist and anti-slavery views in the neoclassical sculptures they produced.
Hosmer was apprenticed to the Welsh sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866), who gave her a studio at the bottom of his garden. The sculptures she made followed Gibson’s neoclassical style, but reflected her feminist views, portraying the struggle of various female figures. With a need t
Period: 1856
Material: Marble
Location: Walker Art Gallery
Dimensions: statue: 77 cm; pedestal: 78.9 cm; base: 22.2 cm; plinth: 15 cm
Scanned: 2016
Scanner: Artec Spider
This marble sculpture of ‘Puck’, the mischievous sprite of Shakespeare’s (1564 – 1616) ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, was the American artist Harriet Hosmer’s most popular work. Hosmer was one of the most successful female artists of the 19th century. Born in Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1830, she spent most of her life living and working in Rome. There she was a leading figure in an important group of women artists who expressed their feminist and anti-slavery views in the neoclassical sculptures they produced.
Hosmer was apprenticed to the Welsh sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866), who gave her a studio at the bottom of his garden. The sculptures she made followed Gibson’s neoclassical style, but reflected her feminist views, portraying the struggle of various female figures. With a need t
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