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Liberty: Bartholdi's Quest for a Visual Metaphor


Article # : 10810 

Section : The Arts
Issue Date : 7 / 1986  2,621 Words
Author : June Hargrove
June Hargrove, associate professor of art history at the University of Maryland, is the American commissioner for Liberty, the French-American Statue in Art and History, an exhibition at the New York Public Library. She is indebted to Janet Headley, the research assistant for the New York Public Library, for help in gathering this material.

       Charged with myth and laden with history, the Statue of Liberty at its centenary has such potency for us as an image that we can scarcely imagine the challenges that confronted its creator, August Bartholdi. We take the statue's form and iconography for granted, as if it were obvious to the artist, who had only to occupy himself with its realization. Indeed, the public drama of the two nations' campaigns for funding, fraught with tensions and crises, has overshadowed the artistic struggle that Bartholdi himself experienced. Clearly, the French sculptor had to be a gifted entrepreneur and a consummate politician to see his vision of a colossal monument to French-American friendship realized, but the creative demands on Bartholdi to design an appropriate form, to infuse it with meaning, and to insure its structural stability are no less remarkable.
       
        For Bartholdi, the colossal in sculpture was not so much a style as a mode of thinking. Vast scale was to evoke the sublime. His earnest desire to create monuments of "great moral value" reflects his heritage as a son of the Enlightenment, which generated the notion that public sculpture has a didactic mission to instruct us in secular virtues. In Bartholdi's mind, the loftiness of the ideal of Liberty warranted a grandiose expression, one that would captivate the beholder with its sublime nobility.
       
        From his first major work, the larger-than-life-size statue General Rapp, exhibited at the 1855 World's Fair, the sculptor manifested his penchant for the colossal. He made two pilgrimages to Egypt, in 1856 and 1869, to admire such colossi as those at Memmon and the Sphinx at Giza (the source of Bartholdi's colossal Lion of Belfort). The latter voyage was further motivated by his hope that the ... (1999 of 16370 Characters)
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