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Sculptures

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Bessie Potter Vonnoh, Mother and Child, Circa 1920
Mother and Child, Circa 1920
Bessie Potter Vonnoh
Bronze
10 1/8 H x 3 7/8 W x 3 5/8 D inches
Twenty-second in an edition of unknown size
Signed and numbered: Bessie Potter Vonnoh / No XXII; inscribed: Roman Bronze Works N-Y-
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artist Description

artist

Bessie Potter Vonnoh was one of the most prolific and popular sculptors of genre in the first decades of the 20th Century in America. Her popularity and fame were based on her choice of subject matter---primarily mothers and children at play and in intimate little groupings---rendered in a tender, intimate, engaging, and somewhat nostalgic fashion which made them extremely appealing to the public which loved her wholesome and easily recognizable style. In contrast to the pretentious memorials and elaborate architectural creations of her peers and fellow sculptors working during the same period, Vonnoh like Mary Cassatt was able to sculpt works which exuded a sense of delicate domesticity balanced with the simple joys of motherhood.

 

Bessie Potter Vonnoh was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1872. About 1890 she traveled to Chicago and apprenticed with Lorado Taft at the Art Institute of Chicago. She later became his assistant and helped him with sculptures that he submitted at the Columbia Exposition of 1893 where she also exhibited some of her own works. At the fair Vonnoh was fascinated with the small figures by the Russian sculptor Paul Troubetzkoy which more than likely inspired her own later varied iterations of mothers and children. In 1894 Potter rented her first studio and said "I left behind me forever the swaddling clothes of art student life and became a professional."  And "I invited my girl friends to pose, making little statuettes of them just as they dropped in, dressed in all the incongruities of the day." Her approach was a radical rejection of the classical Greek ideals and instead she sought to capture the everyday beauty of her modern world in modest sizes that she called statuettes.  In 1896 she modeled A Young Mother, thought to be one of her first along the mother and children themes.  These works won recognition as her Young Mother received a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition of 1895 and again along with Midsummer won honorable mentions at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo in 1898. In 1899 Bessie Potter married the painter Robert Vonnoh. Their time together was marked by one of mutual respect and promotion of one another’s works.

Description

Bessie Vonnoh Potter was inspired like many of her contemporaries with the Impressionist practice of taking modern life as subject matter for their work. Maternal scenes such as her Mother and Child is a quintessential example of one of Vonnoh’s loving representations of modern day women and children enjoying an intimate fleeting moment of tenderness……..The care applied to such nuances belies a confident and assured style of the mature sculptor and suggests a date of creation towards the end of Vonnoh’s long association with the Roman Bronze Works Foundry, perhaps in the 1930’s. In this sculpture Vonnoh has given her figures a strength through their grace and beauty, a spirituality not seen before in the art of her predecessors. Her art is an expression of modern life.

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