Mildred Howells
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
(American (born in Ireland), 1848–1907)
Stanford White
(American, 1853–1906)
1898
Object PlaceNew York, New York
Medium/TechniqueBronze, brown patina, lost-wax cast
DimensionsOverall (frame): 78.7 x 73.7 cm (31 x 29 in.)
Other (diameter of bronze): 53.3 cm (21 in.)
Other (diameter of bronze): 53.3 cm (21 in.)
Credit LineGift of Miss Mildred Howells
Accession number57.558
On View
On viewClassificationsSculpture
Collections
Augustus Saint-Gaudens was the leading sculptor of the American Renaissance. Apprenticed to a New York cameo cutter, Saint-Gaudens later studied sculpture at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He collaborated on important commissions with the famed architects Henry Hobson Richardson, Charles McKim, and Stanford White and is perhaps best known for his pathbreaking work in bronze.In his bronze reliefs, which reflect his admiration for the fine reliefs by Italian Renaissance masters Pisanello and Donatello, Saint-Gaudens employed subtle textures and a multitude of painterly effects that create depth and liveliness of surface. He excerpted the portrait of Mildred Howells, a celebrated poet and watercolorist, from a double portrait relief (now lost) of Mildred and her father, the writer and editor William Dean Howells. Saint-Gaudens, who admired both father and daughter, proposed the project himself. Mildred's forthright gaze, elegant profile, and jaunty pose with her hand on her hip reveal a stylish and confident young woman. The relief is set in its original frame, believed to have been designed by Saint-Gaudens's friend Stanford White. This text was adapted from Ward, et al., MFA Highlights: American Decorative Arts & Sculpture (Boston, 2006) available at www.mfashop.com/mfa-publications.html.
ProvenanceWilliam Dean Howells, New York; Mildred Howells, Boston.