First major retrospective for sculptor Emma Stebbins on view at the Heckscher Museum of Art
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First major retrospective for sculptor Emma Stebbins on view at the Heckscher Museum of Art
Emma Stebbins, The Lotus Eater, 1863. Marble. The Heckscher Museum of Art. Museum Purchase: Town of Huntington Art Acquisition Fund.



HUNTINGTON, NY.- This exhibition is the first to recognize Emma Stebbins (1815–1882) as one of the most significant American sculptors of the nineteenth century. While her Bethesda Fountain in Central Park has been a global icon for 150 years, the full scope of Stebbins’s life and work is virtually unknown. From 1857 to 1870, she created innovative sculptures while living in Rome with her wife, renowned Shakespearean actress Charlotte Cushman, who championed her career. Stebbins modeled inventive and incisive interpretations of literary and biblical subjects, unprecedented allegories of American industry, and notable portraits of her friends and family. In 1863, with the order for the Bethesda Fountain, she became the first woman to earn a commission for a public sculpture from the city of New York. When Bostonians installed her statue of educator Horace Mann on the grounds of the Massachusetts State House in 1865, she became the first woman in the country to complete an outdoor bronze monument.

Emma Stebbins: Carving Out History brings together most of the artist’s rare extant work, including a portrait drawing and several sculptures that are on public view for the first time in a century. In addition to fourteen sculptures, the exhibition features archival material including photographs that document lost marble sculptures and plaster studies that Stebbins never realized in stone or bronze. Stebbins completed the Bethesda Fountain to celebrate the Croton Aqueduct, which brought clean drinking water to New York City. The inclusion of paintings and photographs by historic and contemporary artists including William Merritt Chase, Martha Edelheit, and Ricky Flores attest to its enduring relevance as a monument to health, healing, and peace.

The exhibition is curated by Karli Wurzelbacher, PhD, Chief Curator of The Heckscher Museum of Art, which stewards the largest collection of Stebbins’s work. An extensive scholarly publication with a foreword by Pulitzer- and Tony-award winning playwright Tony Kushner accompanies the exhibition.

Accompanying the groundbreaking exhibition Emma Stebbins: Carving Out History, a richly illustrated 256-page catalog edited by Heckscher Museum Chief Curator Karli Wurzelbacher, PhD is available.

This comprehensive volume includes scholarly contributions and the reflections of contemporary artists. Contributors include Wurzelbacher; Tony Award-winning playwright and screenwriter, Tony Kushner; artist Patricia Cronin; photographer Ricky Flores; David J. Getsy of the University of Virginia; Melissa L. Gustin of National Museums Liverpool; Katrin Horn of the University of Greifswald; and Laura Turner Igoe of the James A. Michener Art Museum.

Emma Stebbins (American, 1815–1882) is one of the most significant American sculptors of the nineteenth century. While her Bethesda Fountain in Central Park has been a global icon for 150 years, the full scope of Stebbins’s life and work is virtually unknown.










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