Howard Roberts (sculptor)

For the jazz musician of this name, see Howard Roberts.
Robert Fulton (1878-83) by Howard Roberts, Statuary Hall Collection, U.S. Capitol.

Howard Roberts (sculptor) (April 8, 1843 April 19, 1900) was an American sculptor based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. At the time of the 1876 Centennial Exposition, he was "considered the most accomplished American sculptor."[1] But his output was small, his reputation was soon surpassed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens and others, and he is now all but forgotten. Examples of his work are in the collections of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the U.S. Capitol.

Biography

Born into a well-to-do Philadelphia family, Roberts studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts under sculptor Joseph A. Bailly. He was an exact contemporary of fellow Philadelphian Thomas Eakins, and both entered the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1866, and studied under sculptor Augustin-Alexandre Dumont. Eakins did not consider Roberts a friend, calling him "a rich disagreeable young man from Philadelphia, one who has without any apparent reason seen fit to be my enemy."[2] Still, Eakins may have sketched him,[3] and Roberts brokered a reconciliation between Eakins and Mary Cassatt.[4] Roberts continued his studies under sculptor Charles Gumery, before returning to Philadelphia in 1869.

Architect Frank Furness, whose firm won the 1871 design competition for PAFA's new building, sought advice from the two wonder boys from Paris, Roberts and Eakins, when designing its painting and sculpture studios.[5]

Roberts's first major work was a marble statuette of Hester Prynne (1869–72), the heroine of Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter. He returned to Paris in 1873, taking with him his life-sized plaster model of Hypathia (heroine of Charles Kingsley's novel of the same name) to be cut in marble. In addition, he began a new work, completing in marble La Premiere Pose (1873–76),[6] and brought it back to Philadelphia to be exhibited at the 1876 Centennial Exposition. He was awarded a gold medal for the statue. As the critic William J. Clark described it:

In the United States Department there was no piece of sculpture which was marked by such high technical qualities as the Premiere Pose of Howard Roberts. ... The subject is a young woman preparing to pose undraped, for the first time, in a painter's studio, and the sculptor has indicated his own appreciation of the fact that the situation has both a comic and a tragic side, by the grotesque comic and tragic masks which he has added as decorations to the uprights of the back of the chair. ... The workmanship, however, is so fine throughout that it would be an almost endless task to attempt a detailed analysis of it.[7]

Roberts helped turn American tastes away from Italianate Neo-Classicism to French Beaux-Arts realism. He was the unanimous choice in an 1877-78 national design competition for a statue to represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Capitol. Rather than creating a heroic formal work, he modeled a young Robert Fulton dressed in casual clothes, deep in thought, contemplating the possibilities of the steamboat model he holds in his lap:

A statue of Robert Fulton has been finished in the clay by Howard Roberts. Fulton is dressed as a working man, and is intent on a small model held in the right hand, the forearm being bare. About his chair are tools. The model has been accepted by the Legislature.[8]

This exactly paralleled what Thomas Eakins was doing in his paintings of William Rush and His Model portraying the artistic/intellectual process of the sculptor/inventor, rather than celebrating the finished work. The Fulton statue was installed in Statuary Hall in 1883.

Roberts carved numerous portrait busts and statuettes, but no other major sculptures are known. He closed his Philadelphia studio in 1894, and returned to Paris, where he died in 1900.

Personal

On June 1, 1876, he married Helen Pauline Davis Lewis (18531938). They had two children: Howard Radclyffe Roberts (18771924), who became a prominent Philadelphia physician; and Helen Pauline Roberts (18801889), who died young.[9]

Selected works

Hypathia Attacked by the Monks (1873-77), Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

References

  1. Matthew Baigell, Dictionary of American Art, (New York: Harper & Row, 1979), p. 304.
  2. TE to Benjamin Eakins, 13 Oct. 1866, The Paris Letters of Thomas Eakins, William Innes Homer, ed. (Princeton University Press, 2009), p. 40.
  3. David Sellin identifies Roberts as the likely subject of an 1867 life study by Eakins. Sellin, p. 21, fig. 16.
  4. Women were not admitted to the École des Beaux-Arts, but Cassatt studied privately with Gérôme, Eakins's principal teacher.
  5. Earl Shinn, "Fine Arts: The Pennsylvania Academy", The Nation [Magazine], vol. 22 (May 4, 1876), pp. 297-98, as quoted in Sellin, p. 37.
  6. La Premiere Pose, from Flickr.
  7. William J. Clark, Philadelphia Evening Telegraph, February 21, 1876, as quoted in Sellin, pp. 30-31.
  8. "Art Notes," New York Times, July 10, 1881.
  9. John W. Jordan, Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania (New York & Chicago: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1911), p. 458.
  10. Eleanore, from Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
  11. Hypathia, from Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
  12. La Premiere Pose, from Philadelphia Museum of Art.

External links

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