Jump to content

Charles Tefft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hannibal Hamlin, National Statuary Hall Collection, US Capitol, Washington D.C.
Luther Peirce Memorial, Bangor Maine
Fountain of Life, Bronx

Charles (or Carl) Eugene Tefft (September 22, 1874 – September 20, 1951) was an American sculptor born in Brewer, Maine. His statue of Hannibal Hamlin is one of Maine's two statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection located in the US Capitol in Washington D.C. A second Tefft statue of Hamlin stands in Norumbega Mall (a public park) in downtown Bangor, Maine.

He studied sculpture with Frederick Ruckstull at the Artist-Artisan Institute in New York City. He also taught there. He worked for a while as an apprentice to John Quincy Adams Ward.

He set up his own studio in Tompkinsville, New York, and later in Guilford, Maine.

As with many sculptors of his generation, Tefft produced architectural sculpture, most notably a figure Renaissance Art, for Cass Gilbert's Saint Louis Art Museum in St. Louis, Missouri.[1]

Tefft was chosen as the director of sculpture at the Sesquicentennial Exposition held in Philadelphia in 1926.[2]

He died in Presque Isle, Maine on September 20, 1951.[3]

Works

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ McCue, George, Photographs by David Finn and Amy Binder, ‘’Sculpture City: St. Louis, Sculpture in the “Gateway to the West”’’, Hudson Hills Press, NY, and Laumeier Sculpture Park, St. Louis, 1988 pp.62-64
  2. ^ Proske, Beatrice Gilman, Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture, Brookgreen Gardens, SC, 1968 p. 150
  3. ^ Opitz, Glenn B., Mantle Fielding's Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers, Apollo Books, Poughkeepsie, NY, 1988
  4. ^ Architect of the Capitol, Compilation of Works of Art and Other Objects in the United States Capitol, United States Printing Office, Washington 1965 p. 210
  5. ^ Proske, Beatrice Gilman, Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture, Brookgreen Gardens, SC, 1968 p. 151
  6. ^ Bzdak, Meredith Arms and Douglas Peterson, photographs, Public Sculpture in New Jersey: Monuments to Collective Identity, Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ, 1999 p.11