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Robert Merrell Gage

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Name
  
Robert Gage

Role
  
Sculptor

Spouse
  
Marian Gage (m. ?–1981)


Robert Merrell Gage wwwcaliforniaartcluborgwpcontentuploads2013

Died
  
October 30, 1981, Laguna Beach, California, United States

Education
  
Art Students League of New York

Robert Merrell Gage (December 26, 1892 – October 30, 1981) was an American sculptor, frequently credited or referred to as Merrell Gage.

Contents

Biography

Gage was born in Topeka, Kansas and studied in the Topeka public schools and at Washburn University. He worked on ranches in the Midwest before settling on an art career. He studied art in New York and France and worked in the studio of Gutzon Borglum as an assistant. In 1916, he set up a sculpture studio in a barn behind his house in Topeka. His first public commission was for a statue of Abraham Lincoln that is now on the grounds of the Kansas State Capitol.

He married Marian Gage, a painter, shortly after World War I when he was in the medical corps and lived in Kansas City. He began teaching sculpture at Washburn and at the Kansas City Art Institute. They moved to Los Angeles from New York in 1924 and built a studio in their home in the Santa Monica Canyon. He was appointed professor of sculpture at the University of Southern California and rose to the head of the department. Gage's mother and sister lived in La Jolla, San Diego, California.

Academy Award Winning Short Film

Gage executed likenesses of Lincoln in many stages of the president's life. In 1955 Gage starred in a short film The Face of Lincoln, in which he modeled Lincoln's features while narrating the story of his life. The film, produced by Wilber T. Blume, won an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. Gage executed numerous commissions in the Los Angeles area and served on the sculpture commission for the 1936 Olympics.

Works

  • seated Lincoln on the Kansas State Capitol grounds in Topeka, ca. (1915)
  • American Legion Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, (1921)
  • Police Monument, Kansas City, Missouri, ( 1921)
  • Electric Fountain in Beverly Hills (1931)
  • the Edison Building, Los Angeles, California, (1931)
  • Facade of the Los Angeles Times Building, (1935)
  • Pioneer Mother Memorial on the Kansas State Capitol grounds, (1937)
  • the Allan J. Hancock Foundation, University of Southern California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, (1940)
  • Bust of Sherman Minton at the Indiana Statehouse in Indianapolis, (1956)
  • head of Abraham Lincoln 110 Grand Avenue, Los Angeles (1961)
  • many schools and churches
  • References

    Robert Merrell Gage Wikipedia