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Sculptures

Elk Statue in Portland, Oregon

George Sears Greene

Sea Nymph on Sea Horse

Roland Hinton Perry (January 25, 1870 – October 28, 1941) was an American sculptor and painter.

Background

Perry was born in New York City to George and Ione Hinton Perry, and entered the École des Beaux Arts in 1890 at the age of 19. At 21, he studied at the Académie Julian and Académie Delécluse in Paris and focused on sculpture, the medium in which he would achieve the most artistic success.
Career

After returning to the United States, Perry received a commission to sculpt a series of bas-reliefs for the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. in 1894. The following year, he was commissioned to create the Court of Neptune Fountain in front of the Library's main building, now known as the Thomas Jefferson Building.

The success of this work in Washington led to other commissions including a design for the statue of Commonwealth on top of the dome of Pennsylvania's new Capitol Building in 1905. He also created the spandrels on the temporary Dewey Arch in New York City (1899), a frieze for the New Amsterdam Theater (1903), statues of Dr. Benjamin Rush in Washington and of General George S. Greene at Gettysburg Battlefield (both 1904), the Perry Lions on the Connecticut Avenue Bridge in Washington (1906), a figural group atop Lookout Mountain in Chattanooga, Tennessee (1907), and a monument to the Thirty-Eighth Infantry in Syracuse, New York (1920).

Perry was a member of the Grand Central Art Gallery and the National Sculpture Society. Many of his paintings are displayed at the Detroit Museum of Art.
Gallery

Neptune in Roland Hinton Perry's Court of Neptune Fountain (1895) at the Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C.

George S. Greene monument (1904), Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

Perry Lions (1906) on the Connecticut Avenue Bridge, Washington, D.C.

References
* Roland Hinton Perry at Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Capitol: Capitol Artists
* "R. H. Perry is Dead", The New York Times, October 29, 1941.
* "Roland Perry, Sculptor, Dies", The Washington Post, October 30, 1941.

From Wikipedia. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

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