CHARLES ATWOOD AND .......MacNeil??

FISHER TWINS. FISHER BUILDING. 343 South Dearborn.




These twin boys, located on the building's south facade are reputed to be sons of the the Fisher Building's developer.  But I've been unable to credit the work to a sculptor.  Looking at these..., perhaps, maybe, it just might be.... some early work from Hermon Atkins Macneil.  It would make sense.  Atwood and MacNeil worked together at the World's Fair. Why not again at the Fisher Building -- where ornament on a very sparse frame takes on an almost ironic importance.

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CHARLES ATWOOD. Architecture and Ornament
PHOTOGRAPHS BY GREGORY H. JENKINS AIA

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ATWOOD and MARTINY. Sculpture

The Museum of Science and Industry.





Charles Atwood's distinct talent for interpreting  and re-interpreting classical forms is highlighted on the North and South Facades of the The Fine Arts Building at the Columbian Exposition (Now the Museum of Science and Industry). In this photo we see Sculptural columns and Structural sculpture  -- an inversion in late afternoon sunlight.  Phillip Martiny, Sculptor, - and Atwood/s collaborator --   seems to have had an inate sense of mass and scale:  his figures are at perfect rest on Atwood's Ionic columns.

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CHARLES ATWOOD. Sculpture

Sculpture, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, was not simply ornament. It was not just "lobby" sculpture, or "plaza" sculpture.   A sculpture's location, size, subject matter and purpose were integral to the building as a whole. 
Charles Atwoods' Fine Arts Building at the Columbian Exposition would not be complete without Phillip Martiny's sculpture.  Both are better for the other.

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CHARLES ATWOOD. Sculptural Collaboration

Late 19th and early 20th Century Architects collaborated with Sculptors to produce a "Building."  Sullivan worked with Bock and Schneider.  Wright with Ianelli.  Peirce Anderson with Henry Hering.  And Charles Atwood worked with Phillip Martiny and his young assistant, Henry Hering at the Fine Arts Building at the Columbian Exposition.  The work below (now at the Museum of Science and Industry) is a  replacement of the original -- albeit a good one.  Hering was given the replacement commission (in his own right)  in the late "teens.


Although ornament and sculptures' place in construction has gone through a radical transformation, it is still a collaboration of Architect and Sculptor that can produce memorable art. 

William Hartmann and Pablo Picasso come to mind... (along the first Mayor Daley).


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CHARLES ATWOOD. Architectural Ornament

MARSHALL FIELD and Company

Charles Atwood was "in the thick" of designing  some 30 structures at the Columbian Exposition when he was given the Marshall Field Commission.  He did not give it short shrift.




Tucked below the cornice at Wabash and Washington, this piece of figural sculpture watches over the building.  The  quality is best seen with binoculars -- and by the lucky few with offices directly across the street......ten floors up.
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MOSES EZEKIEL. Christopher Columbus


The years preceeding and immediately following the Columbian Exposition were very good for Sculpture in Chicago.  Better,  than we might guess today today.  Much fine work was destroyed.  Lucky pieces  were salvaged, saved and dispersed throughout the City.

Below is Moses Ezekial's 1894 "Columbus" that onced topped  W. W. Boyington's Columbus Memorial at the corner of State and Washington.  He has been carefully restored and re-placed (appropriately) in Little Italy -- near Polk and Loomis.



Moses Ezekial and Johannes Gehlert were once among the most prominent sculptors in Chicago.  Their work still exists.  Just not where one would expect.

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LORADO TAFT. The Fountain of Time

ANOTHER BALANCING ACT


Lorado Taft continued the formula of "balance" throughout his career. Even  the 1922 Fountain of Time -- one of Taft's last works -- and despite its size  (more than 125 feet wide and containing over 100 figures) is a balanced composition of detail, sub-component and whole that provides  perfect organization for a very complicated assembly.
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FOUNTAIN OF TIME.  Viewed from the East
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FOUNTAIN OF TIME.  View to the Right
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FOUNTAIN OF TIME.  Sub-Composition
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FOUTAIN OF TIME.  Detail
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FOUNTAIN OF TIME.  Taft Self-Portrait.
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The Fountain of Time is located at the west end of Midway Plaisance -- where its complexity requires viewing in both morning and afternoon light.  My only regret is that the sculpture was never rendered in the granite that Taft had orginally conceived. The figures most protected  from the weather show Taft at the peak of his creative powers -- if not his career.  For more photographs of the FOUNTAIN OF TIME, click HERE.

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