The New York Stock Exchange Pediment, (sculpture)
Object Details
- sculptor
- Ward, John Quincy Adams 1830-1910
- Bartlett, Paul Wayland 1865-1925
- architect
- Post, George Browne 1837-1913
- carver
- Piccirilli, Getulio
- Index of American Sculpture, University of Delaware, 1985
- Gayle, Margot & Michele Cohen, "Guide to Manhattan's Outdoor Sculpture," New York: Prentice Hall, 1988, pg. 26.
- National Park Service, American Monuments and Outdoor Sculpture Database, NY5124, 1989.
- Monumental News, June 1903, pg. 376.
- Sharp, Lewis I., "John Quincy Adams Ward Dean of American Sculpture," Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1985, no. 112.
- Save Outdoor Sculpture, New York, New York survey, 1993.
- Bronx Times, July 15, 1999, pg. 7.
- Image on file.
- Gayle, Margot & Michele Cohen, "Guide to Manhattan's Outdoor Sculpture," New York: Prentice Hall, 1988, pg. 26.
- J. Q. ADAMS WARD signed
- The information provided about this artwork was compiled as part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture database, designed to provide descriptive and location information on artworks by American artists in public and private collections worldwide.
- Summary
- Pediment consists of 11 figures. The central figure is Integrity, a classically robed female figure wearing a winged cap and standing on a stepped base. She stretches both of her arms outward with clenched fists. At her feet are two naked children who sit on either side of her base. One child reads a book and the other examines a grain hamper. Figures representing the "works of man" are positioned on either side of Integrity. To her proper right is the symbol of Mechanical Production depicted by a nude male figure who holds a gear shift with his proper right hand and a gear with his proper left hand. Next to him is male figure who symbolizes International Trade. He stands with his proper right hand resting on a ship's wheel. Next to him is a group of two male figures, one reclining and one kneeling, studying some charts. These two figures represent Realizing Intelligence and Science.
- On the other side of Integrity are figures representing the "works of man" which relate to gifts of the earth. The first figure to Integrity's proper left is a nude male who walks bent over under the weight of a sack he's carrying on his back. In the background is a relief of wheat sheaths. Standing next to him is a female dressed in a skirt, blouse, and kerchief. In her proper right hand she holds a distaff. These two figures represent Agriculture. Next to them is a group of two nude males, both crouching to examine a rock. These two figures representMining. At each corner of the pediment is a wave which symbolizes the influence of the Stock Exchange which stretches from sea to sea.
- Original marble modeled 1901-1904. 1936
- Control number
- IAS 77006222
- Type
- Sculptures-Pediment
- Sculptures-Outdoor Sculpture
- Sculptures
- Medium
- Pediment figures: sheet copper coated with white lead
- Owner/Location
- Administered by New York Stock Exchange Archives 18 Broad Street at Wall Street New York New York 10005
- Located New York Stock Exchange 18 Broad Street at Wall Street Pediment New York New York 10005
- Title
- Integrity Protecting the Works of Man, (sculpture)
- Art Inventories Catalog, Smithsonian American Art Museums
- Topic
- Figure group
- Allegory--Quality--Virtue
- Allegory--Arts & Sciences--Agriculture
- Allegory--Arts & Sciences--Industry
- Allegory--Arts & Sciences--Technology
- Record ID
- siris_ari_21887
- Metadata Usage (text)
- Usage conditions apply