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Sidney Waugh

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Nationality
  
American

Books
  
The Art of Glass Making

Known for
  
Sculpture

Awards
  
Prix de Rome (1929)

Name
  
Sidney Waugh


Sidney Waugh

Born
  
January 17, 1904 (
1904-01-17
)
Amherst, Massachusetts

Died
  
1963, New York City, New York, United States

Sidney Waugh (January 17, 1904 – June 30, 1963) was an American sculptor known for his monuments, medals, etched and moulded glass, and architectural sculpture. Waugh was born in Amherst, Massachusetts. His father, Frank Waugh, was a landscape architect and professor of horticulture and landscape gardening at Massachusetts State College.

Sidney Waugh From the Collection Sidney Waugh Mead Musings

Early years

Waugh entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at the age of 16 and attended for three years. This was followed by several years study in Rome and Paris where he studied with Antoine Bourdelle and worked as an assistant to Henri Bouchard. He was then appointed sculptor for the American Battle Monuments Commission for whom he produced The Spirit of American Youth and another representing the spirit of peace on the central high pylon at the Florence American Cemetery and Memorial.

In 1929 he won the Prix de Rome where he stayed until 1932. He was commissioned by Steuben Glass in 1934 to prepare for designs for the reinvigorated company under the directorship of Arthur Houghton.

Waugh died in New York City in 1963.

References

Sidney Waugh Wikipedia