Carved Stone Dog
Maker
Anna Hyatt Huntington
(American, 1876 - 1973)
Collections
ClassificationsSCULPTURE
Date1910
Mediumstone
Dimensionsheight: 48 in. (121.9 cm.)
SignedSigned: Anna Hyatt, 1910
InscribedSigned: Anna Hyatt, 1910
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextDogs were dear to sculptor Anna Hyatt Huntington, one of the most successful woman artists of the early 20th century, related to Henry and Arabella Huntington through marriage to their son Archer. Years before becoming a Huntington, Anna grew up drawing animals on a family farm in Porto Bello, Maryland—combining the interests of her father, a Harvard zoologist, and her mother, an amateur painter. As a teen, she attempted a statue of the family’s great dane, named Malack, and was inspired to become a professional sculptor. A few years later, Anna began to grow in reputation as a skillful animalier, or artist who depicts animals. Her first sales and solo exhibition were in her home town of Boston. In 1903, she moved to New York City, where she sculpted animals at the Bronx Zoo and was roommates with fellow sculptor Abastenia St. Leger Eberle. Throughout her long career, during which she achieved unprecedented awards, recognition and commissions in an era generally prohibitive of women artists, she sculpted exotic animals as well as historic and mythical human figures, ranging from statuettes to public monuments. However, she often returned to dogs and great danes, such as the pair in granite now at Brookgreen Gardens, and two in bronze at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Commenting on her success, the sculptor said: “I always got a great deal of sympathy from my family.” This included Arabella, who purchased The Huntington’s Carved Stone Dogs as a birthday gift for Henry. Though they look alike, the two Danes have subtle differences, for example, the angle of their heads, position of their ears, or how they sit.
Status
On viewObject number23.2
Daniel Huntington
08/29/1859
Object number: 91.37