Left hand of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)

Classification: 
Date: 
1886
Medium: 
Patinated bronze
Dimensions: 
Overall: 3 x 6 3/4 x 4 1/4 in. ( 7.6 x 17.1 x 10.8 cm )
Description: 
Life cast
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mr. Rodman Gilder
Object Number: 
1949.250
Marks: 
inscriptions: "COPYRIGHT 1886 BY LEONARD W. VOLK/THIS CAST OF THE HAND/OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN WAS/ MADE FROM THE FIRST REPLICA OF THE ORIGINAL MADE AT SPRING/FIELD THE SUNDAY FOLLOWING/HIS NOMINATION TO THE/PRESIDENCY/IN 1860"
Gallery Label: 
In mid-May, 1860, sculptor Leonard Volk traveled to Springfield, Illinois to execute casts of the presidential candidate's hands for his full-length statue. Lincoln held a portion of a broom handle in his right hand to allow Volk to depict him holding a rolled document or other item in the finished statue. Volk noted that Lincoln's right hand was severely swollen from constant handshaking on the campaign trail. He also commented on the scar on Lincoln's left thumb, a vestige of his days as a rail-splitter.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1886
eMuseum Object ID: 
17700
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Unidentified Woman Riding a Lion

Classification: 
Date: 
Late 19th century
Medium: 
White ceramic (parian) on ebonized pine and beech wood pedestal
Dimensions: 
Overall: 12 x 10 7/8 x 4 3/8 in. ( 30.5 x 27.6 x 11.1 cm )
Description: 
Figures
Credit Line: 
Gift from an unidentified source
Object Number: 
INV.692
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
0
eMuseum Object ID: 
17699
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Right Hand of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)

Classification: 
Date: 
1886
Medium: 
Patinated bronze
Dimensions: 
Overall: 3 5/8 x 6 1/4 x 5 in. ( 9.2 x 15.9 x 12.7 cm )
Description: 
Life cast.
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mrs. John V. Irwin
Object Number: 
1939.584
Marks: 
inscriptions: end of cast at wrist: "COPYRIGHT 1886 BY LEONARD W. VOLK/ THIS CAST OF THE HAND/ OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN/WAS MADE FROM THE FIRST/REPLICA CAST OF THE ORIGINAL/MADE AT SPRINGFIELD ILL THE/SUNDAY FOLLOWING HIS/NOMINATION TOO THE/PRESIDE/NCY 1860"
Gallery Label: 
In mid-May, 1860, sculptor Leonard Volk traveled to Springfield, Illinois to execute casts of the presidential candidate's hands for his full-length statue. Lincoln held a portion of a broom handle in his right hand to allow Volk to depict him holding a rolled document or other item in the finished statue. Volk noted that Lincoln's right hand was severely swollen from constant handshaking on the campaign trail. He also commented on the scar on Lincoln's left thumb, a vestige of his days as a rail-splitter.
Bibliography: 
Holzer, Harold and The New-York Historical Society. "The Civil War in 50 Objects." New York: Viking, 2013.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1886
eMuseum Object ID: 
17698
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Coachman

Classification: 
Date: 
ca. 1865
Medium: 
Carved walnut
Dimensions: 
Overall: 41 1/2 x 13 1/2 x 9 1/2 in. ( 105.4 x 34.3 x 24.1 cm )
Description: 
Carved walnut figure representing a coachman.
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mr. William Brewster
Object Number: 
1941.270a
Marks: 
signed: proper left side of base of figure: "E. PLASSMAN/fec"
Gallery Label: 
This figure is one of a pair of newel posts from the grand staircases in coachmaker Brewster & Company's elegant New York City showroom. One carved figure represents a coachman, the other a groom.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1865
eMuseum Object ID: 
17697
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Reclining Cupid

Classification: 
Date: 
1760-1800
Medium: 
Stoneware
Dimensions: 
Overall: 10 3/4 x 25 1/2 x 15 in. ( 27.3 x 64.8 x 38.1 cm )
Description: 
Unglazed black stoneware (black basaltes) sculpture; reclining Cupid on elliptical base with molded drapery.
Object Number: 
1931.87
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1800
eMuseum Object ID: 
17696
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Aaron Burr (1756-1836)

Collections: 
Classification: 
Is owned by NYHS: 
Yes
Highlight: 
Display this item in the highlights
Date: 
1836
Medium: 
Plaster with wash
Dimensions: 
Overall: 13 1/4 x 6 1/4 x 7 1/4 in. ( 33.7 x 15.9 x 18.4 cm )
Description: 
Death mask
Credit Line: 
Gift of Dr. John E. Stillwell
Object Number: 
1927.59
Marks: 
inscribed: on interior in red paint: "78S" [old N-YHS cat #]
Gallery Label: 
Made for Fowler & Wells of NY, phrenologists, Sept. 14, 1836. Mask made at cost of $50.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1836
eMuseum Object ID: 
17695
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

James Monroe (1758-1831)

Classification: 
Date: 
1817
Medium: 
Red wax and black glass
Dimensions: 
Overall: 2 7/8 x 1 3/4 x 1/2 in. ( 7.3 x 4.4 x 1.3 cm )
Description: 
Bas-relief portrait.
Credit Line: 
Gift of the Gallatin family
Object Number: 
1880.7
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1817
eMuseum Object ID: 
17694
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Joseph M. White (1781-1839)

Classification: 
Date: 
ca. 1834-1835
Medium: 
Marble
Dimensions: 
Overall: 21 x 12 3/4 x 10 1/4 in. ( 53.3 x 32.4 x 26 cm )
Description: 
Portrait bust.
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mrs. Charles Augustus Davis
Object Number: 
1867.440
Marks: 
painted: on back in red: "S-66" [old N-YHS #]
Gallery Label: 
White, who was born in Franklin County, Kentucky, studied law and established his practice in Pensacola, Florida, in 1821. He was elected to Congress in 1825, serving as a representative until 1837.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1835
eMuseum Object ID: 
17692
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

The Foundling

Classification: 
Date: 
1870
Medium: 
Bronze
Dimensions: 
Overall: 21 x 12 1/4 x 10 3/4 in. ( 53.3 x 31.1 x 27.3 cm )
Description: 
Genre figure
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mr. Francis D. Wiener
Object Number: 
1961.51
Marks: 
signed: proper left top front of base: "JOHN ROGERS/NEW YORK" inscribed: back of base: "PATENTED/NOV.22.1870" inscribed: front of base: "THE FOUNDLING"
Gallery Label: 
This bronze served as the master model for the plasters that Rogers sold to a broad audience of middle-class Americans. After the end of the Civil War, Rogers explored several possibilities for new subjects, among them pressing social issues, as seen in The Foundling of late 1870. In this work a young girl stands outside a vine-covered gate, listening carefully to the scene playing out behind it. Her tattered clothes signal her poverty, and her slight stature and her hair, still in pigtails, indicate her youth. She has left her child in a basket at the gate, and an older man has picked up the infant. He wears a dressing gown and holds a lantern, suggesting that the scene takes place under cover of darkness. He gazes at the baby with a benevolent and bemused look as it grasps his chin in an innocent, trusting gesture. Rogers made a bold choice to confront the issue of illegitimacy directly; though perennial, it would have seldom been a topic of discussion in polite society. Unlike his Civil War groups, it did not address an experience shared by all but, rather, advocated charity and sensitivity toward the less fortunate in difficult circumstances. Critics echoed Rogers' call: the New York Evening Post considered it a fitting segue from Rogers' Civil War groups, declaring him "ingenious and effective in making plastic art the hand-maid of charity, and in thus celebrating the victories of peace." The Boston Daily Evening Transcript observed that Rogers had taken as his new subject "life among the lowly." The writer quoted the subtitle of Harriet Beecher Stowe's book Uncle Tom's Cabin, which had been a galvanizing force in the abolitionist movement, suggesting that Rogers' sculpture could represent a similar call to action. Another critic reiterated this sentiment, calling it "the story of real life in some of its dark phases," and pointing out that its message could not be disregarded "if we would seek to relieve the poor and rescue the unfortunate." Rogers, himself sensitive and sentimental, was no doubt bolstered by his recent success and moved by compassion to attempt a theme similar to his earlier work The Slave Auction (1928.28) of 1859, which represented not merely a perceptive reflection of contemporary life but also a call for change. Though The Slave Auction had sold poorly because of its controversial subject, a decade later Rogers' established popularity gave him the opportunity to try again. It appears that The Foundling was not among his most commercially successful works, since there are relatively few extant copies today. In spite of its slower sales, Rogers must have considered the sculpture an important part of his oeuvre and his message to the public; though he often dropped less popular works from his sales catalogue if they were poor sellers, this one remained for nearly twenty years. However, Rogers did not continue to pursue such themes. Instead, he turned to the very private and the very public, in the form of domestic life and theatrical scenes.
Bibliography: 
Articles, Scrapbooks of miscellaneous clippings, etc. about John Rogers, Vols. 3, 4, New York Historical Society. "A New Group by Rogers," The Evening Post, New York, Dec. 14, 1870, p. 2. "Art Matters," Daily Evening Transcript, Boston, Dec. 19, 1870, p. 2. Barck, Dorothy, "Rogers Group in the Museum of the New-York Historical Society", New-York Historical Society Quarterly, Vol. XVI, No. 3, October, 1932, p. 76. Smith, Mrs. and Mrs. Chetwood, Rogers Groups: Thought and Wrought by John Rogers, Boston: Charles E. Goodspeed & Co., 1934, pp.76-7. Wallace, David H., John Rogers, The People's Sculptor, Middleton, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1967, pp. 112, 116, 125, 134, 225-6, 294, 304. Craven, Wayne, Sculpture in America, New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1968, pp. 357-366. Holzer, Harold, and Farber, Joseph, "The Sculpture of John Rogers," Antiques Magazine, April 1970, pp. 756-68. Bleier, Paul and Meta, John Rogers Statuary, Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2001, pp. 124-5.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1870
eMuseum Object ID: 
17691
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

Roscoe Conkling (1829-1888)

Classification: 
Date: 
1892
Medium: 
Brown patinated bronze
Dimensions: 
Overall: 23 1/2 x 13 x 10 3/4 in. ( 59.7 x 33 x 27.3 cm )
Description: 
Portrait bust
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mr. Walter Oakman
Object Number: 
1956.102
Marks: 
Signature: under proper right shoulder: "J. Q. A. WARD Sculptor" Mark: proper left back: "Cast by the Henry-Bonnard Bronze Co New York 1892."
Gallery Label: 
In 1893 the City of New York unveiled its full length statue of Roscoe Conkling by Ward. This bust is related to that statue, probably as the portrait model of the head. Conkling was the leader of the Republican party in New York State in the 1870s and in 1876 was one of the men considered for his party's presidential nomination.
Date Begin: 
0
Date End: 
1892
eMuseum Object ID: 
17690
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.

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