Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Sherman Minton (bust)

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Year
  
1956 (1956)

Owner
  
State of Indiana

Created
  
1956

Type
  
Sculpture

Artist
  
Robert Merrell Gage

Sherman Minton (bust) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb1

Dimensions
  
61 cm × 76.8 cm × 32.4 cm (24 in × 30.25 in × 12.75 in)

Location
  
Indiana Statehouse, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Similar
  
Benjamin Harrison, Matthew E Welsh, Tulip to Life, Daniel W Voorhees, Wendell Willkie

The bust of Sherman Minton is a public artwork by American artist Robert Merrell Gage, located on the main floor of the Indiana Statehouse, which is in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. Cast in bronze in 1956, it was commissioned to honor politician and Indiana native Sherman Minton.

Contents

Description

The bust is made from cast bronze and depicts the subject from the lower shoulders up, clad in a judicial robe. Minton is depicted as middle-aged, mustached, with a moderately receded hairline. His head is rotated slightly to the proper left. Slightly larger than life-size, the piece is 30.25 inches wide at the shoulders, 11.5 inches wide at the head, 24 inches high, and 11.75 inches deep. It is mounted on a stone block in a semi-cylindrical niche. Affixed to the front of the block is a bronze plaque which reads:

Subject

Sherman Minton (October 20, 1890 – April 9, 1965) was primarily noted for being a Democratic United States Senator representing Indiana and an Associate United States Supreme Court justice. The first U.S. Supreme Court justice from Indiana, he was a supporter of New Deal legislation as a senator and an advocate of judicial restraint as a court justice. He retired in 1956 due to poor health.

Historical information

The bust was commissioned shortly after Minton's retirement by then-governor of Indiana George N. Craig, paid for out of the governor's contingency fund. It was dedicated on December 21, 1956 at an unveiling ceremony which featured as speakers both Gov. Craig and William T. Fitzgerald, president of the Indiana State Bar Association at that time, in addition to Minton himself.

Location history

Cast in New York and transported to Indianapolis, the bust was originally housed in a prominent niche outside the governor’s office at the statehouse rotunda, displacing a bust of George Washington, which was moved to an upper floor. A statement by the governor's private secretary at the time suggested that this was simply because the Washington bust was made of plaster and the Minton bust of bronze, and that the Minton bust would be a better aesthetic match for an adjoining bronze piece. A 1976 catalog lists the bust’s location at the statehouse as the southwest corner pier of the central rotunda, facing south. This continues to be its current location as of 2011.

Artist

A native of Topeka, Kansas, sculptor Robert Merrell Gage (December 26, 1892 – October 30, 1981, often referred to as Merrell Gage) was noted for his numerous public art commissions. His first such commission was for a statue of Abraham Lincoln that is now on the grounds of the Kansas State Capitol. He eventually became a professor of sculpture at the University of Southern California, and it was during his tenure there that he was commissioned to produce the Sherman Minton bust.

References

Sherman Minton (bust) Wikipedia