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Richard E Brooks

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Name
  
Richard Brooks


Richard E. Brooks

Richard Edwin Brooks (1865–1919) was born in Braintree, Massachusetts, studied in Paris under the sculptor Jean-Paul Aubé (1837–1916). His early work Chant de la Vague (Song of the Wave) was idealistic; later works were more conventional statues.

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Notable works

  • Statue of Thomas Cass, in Boston (1899).
  • Bust of Francis Amasa Walker in the Boston Public Library (1901).
  • Statues for Maryland in the National Statuary Hall Collection (1903):
  • Charles Carroll
  • John Hanson
  • Statue of William Henry Seward, in Seattle (1909) for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition and moved to Volunteer Park in 1910.
  • Statue of Robert Treat Paine (a Signer of the Declaration of Independence) in Taunton, Massachusetts (1904)
  • Statue of John H. McGraw, in Seattle (1913).
  • Honors

  • Elected to National Sculpture Society (1897).
  • Gold medal in sculpture at the Buffalo Pan-American Exposition 1901.
  • Elected to American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1908.
  • References

    Richard E. Brooks Wikipedia


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