Paul Howard Manship (1885 – 1966) – American Sculptor

Advertisements

Paul Howard Manship (1885 – 1966) was an American Sculptor. He was influenced by Hindu and Buddhist Indian Sculpture.

Education

He began his artistic education at the St. Paul School of Art in Minnesota, and he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts before moving on to New York City’s Art Student League. Throughout his subsequent career, he created more than 700 sculptural pieces in stone and marble.

From 1909 to 1912, Manship studied at the American Academy in Rome, and during this time, he became particularly interested in classical art – particularly that of Greece, India and Egypt. Manship’s sculpture tended to reflect this interest in classicism, and modernists admired Manship’s use of simplified lines, while cultural conservatives liked his reference to traditional idioms.

Biography

Grace Rainey Rogers commissioned him to produce the 1934 Paul J. Rainey memorial gateway of the New York Zoological Park, Bronx Zoo. To complete the commission, he worked with five assistants in Paris and New York for five years. Manship worked in a refined, streamlined style. He achieved great success in the creation of public monuments. He was well known for the gilded-bronze Prometheus (1933) at Rockefeller Center Plaza, New York.

Rainey Memorial Gates at the entrance to the Bronx Zoo designed by Paul Howard Manship
Rainey Memorial Gates at the entrance to the Bronx Zoo, designed by Paul Howard Manship

Manship’s work attempts to bridge the gap between classical and modern art, but by the 1940s, it had fallen from favour with the avant-garde, who was not charmed by his “archaic style” and thought it obsolete. Manship was not primarily a portraitist, but he did make busts of notables such as Theodore Roosevelt and John D. Rockefeller.

A selection of his work

Lehman Gates in Central Park sculpture designed by Paul Howard Manship
Lehman Gates in Central Park sculpture designed by Paul Howard Manship
Playfulness – 1912 in Bronze designed by Paul Howard Manship
Playfulness – 1912 in Bronze designed by Paul Howard Manship

Sources

Byars, M., & Riley, T. (2004). The design encyclopedia. Laurence King Publishing.

Advertisements

More on Sculptors

Gustave Miklos (1888 – 1967) Hungarian Designer

In the French army during World War I, he discovered the art of Greece and Byzantium. In Paris after the war, he met Jacques Doucet, for whom he designed silverware, enamels, tapestries and carpets for the residence on the avenue du Bois (today avenue Foch). In c1923 he turned to sculpture and completed commissions for…

Keep reading

Alexander Calder (1898 – 1976) American Designer & Artist

He worked as an engineer in Rutherford, New Jersey, in 1919, and as a draftsperson and engineer in West Coast logging camps from 1919 to 23; from 1923 to 1930, he was active in New York, sketching for the National Police Gazette 1925—26; in 1926, he travelled to England and Paris, where he produced his…

Keep reading

Hugo Leven (1874 – 1956) German Sculptor and Metalsmith

Leven studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule and then at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. He worked in his father Louis Leven’s studio for a time, had numerous contacts with French artists who had a strong influence on him, and quickly became known. Engelbert Kayser hired him as the first employee in his studio. From 1895 to 1904,…

Keep reading

Wharton Esherick (1887 – 1970) American Sculptor and Furniture Designer

As a result, his sculptural furniture and furnishings are his most well-known works. For his leadership in designing non-traditional designs and supporting and inspiring artists/craftspeople by example, Esherick was dubbed the “dean of American artisans” by his peers during his lifetime. Esherick’s impact can still be apparent in contemporary artisans’ work, especially in the Studio…

Keep reading

Zadik Zadikian: A Maestro of Material and Metamorphosis

Armenian artist and furniture designer Zadik Zadikian, born in 1948, escaped Soviet Armenia to explore his craft spanning sculpture, installation, and furniture design. His prolific work often integrates gold, creating aesthetically striking and emotionally resonant pieces, demonstrating a unique fusion of functionality and extravagant form.

Keep reading

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.