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488:"He is now occupied in an interesting scheme for a stained glass window, all in tones of yellow, showing morning, noon and night. The first represents the Guardian Angel of Childhood, with a symbolical sunflower in the hand; the second, the Angel of Noonday, with spreading wings casting their shade over the child; and the third, the Angel of Night, holding the child in her arms, and a poppy. Around, the words symbolical of the twelve months.
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497:"One of his earliest efforts was that serious but somewhat unwieldy and but slightly decorative concept for a fountain, 'The Cider Press," which was exhibited at the Columbian Exposition, and finally found a resting place in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. This work showed a vigorous and well-constructed nude figure turning with much effort the screw of a cider press,—a somewhat tantalizing motive for a drinking fountain."
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On
October 3, 1886, Clarke married Adelaide Knox, the daughter of Theodore Hand Knox and Adelaide Susan Jenney, in Geneva, Switzerland. The couple had three children: daughters Alma Adelaide Clarke and Beatrice Clarke Remington, and son Charles John Clarke, named for his grandfather and known as
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presented Clarke with a medal (the only one awarded to a foreign sculptor). A larger-than-life-size bronze version was cast in Paris by
Jaboeuf & Bezout Fondeurs, and exhibited at the 1893 World's Fair. The following year, it was exhibited at the
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173:, at the Paris Salon of 1892. It depicts a muscular father pressing apples while his young son samples the juice. Clarke designed it to be a public drinking fountain, with water to flow out of the press and into a bucket at its base.
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272:(1900), a larger-than-life-size plaster sculpture group for his own alma mater, Princeton University, but it seems never to have been executed in bronze or marble.
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320:-style summer house and studio, "Fernbrook," in Lenox, Massachusetts. Completed in 1904, Clarke generally worked there from May to October.
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30:(April 25, 1860 – November 15, 1920) was an American painter and sculptor. He is best known for his bronze sculpture
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Clarke lived in Europe for 11 years, and returned with his family to the United States in 1894. He hired architect
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Clarke exhibited his first painting at the Paris Salon of 1885, and had his first success with the wryly humorous
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World's
Columbian Exposition, Revised Catalogue, Department of Fine Arts, with Index of Exhibitors
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in 1902. George M. Reevs painted his "diploma" portrait. Clarke was a member of the
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in
Philadelphia owns "A Fool's Fool" (1887), and a collection of Clarke's sketches:
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Clarke's brothers, Louis, John and James, were pioneers in automobile production.
99:. Clarke left the École after less than 3 years, and became the special pupil of
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Paintings and
Sculpture at the National Academy of Design, Volume I: 1826-1925
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PAFA also holds a collection of his correspondence and photographs:
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in 1894. Vandalism caused it to be relocated to the grounds of the
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59:, from which he graduated in 1882. He studied for a year at the
669:(New York and Manchester: Hudson Hills Press, 2004), p. 457.
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W. A. Cooper, "Artists in Their
Studios: Thomas S. Clarke,"
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caryatides (1899), Appellate
Division Courthouse of New York
48:, the eldest of the six children of Charles John Clarke, a
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California
Midwinter International Exposition of 1894
550:, vol. 12, no. 132 (August 27, 1892), pp. 66, 81.
409:(c. 1892) cartoon for a stained glass window
580:(New York: The MacMillan Company, 1903), p. 436.
232:Appellate Division Courthouse of New York State
55:He was a cartoonist for a student newspaper at
364:(1887), Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
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565:(Chicago: W.B. Conkey Company, 1893), p. 14.
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784:American alumni of the École des Beaux-Arts
532:, vol. 130, no. 779 (May 1895), pp. 469-74.
169:Clarke debuted a plaster sculpture group,
44:Named for his grandfather, he was born in
16:American painter and sculptor (1860–1920)
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246:, a temporary structure erected in
63:, then worked as an illustrator in
809:20th-century American male artists
804:19th-century American male artists
794:National Sculpture Society members
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122:Clarke exhibited paintings at the
115:, exhibited at the Salon of 1887.
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578:The History of American Sculpture
327:patented the porcelain-insulated
124:1893 World's Columbian Exposition
23:Thomas Shields Clarke, circa 1900
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268:(active 1898–1919). He modeled
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759:20th-century American painters
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179:Historical American Exposition
52:executive, and Louisa Semple.
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789:Burials at Allegheny Cemetery
206:Clarke modeled a set of four
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779:Princeton University alumni
647:The Princeton Alumni Weekly
377:The Night Market in Morocco
132:The Night Market in Morocco
117:The Night Market in Morocco
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394:(1892), private collection
286:National Sculpture Society
282:National Academy of Design
177:was exhibited at the 1892
91:, where he studied in the
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704:(5): 107–109. April 1909.
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665:David B. Dearinger, ed.,
561:Department of Fine Arts,
379:(c. 1891), unlocated
87:. He was admitted to the
548:The Illustrated American
46:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
774:Artists from Pittsburgh
407:Morning, Noon and Night
254:'s 1898 victory in the
148:medal for his paintings
144:Morning, Noon and Night
136:Portrait of Madame d' E
754:American male painters
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101:Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret
83:; and sculpture under
75:—painting under
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734:Thomas Shields Clarke
728:Thomas Shields Clarke
719:Thomas Shields Clarke
595:The Apple Cider Press
455:(1900), plaster model
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126:in Chicago, Illinois—
81:Jules Joseph Lefebvre
50:Pennsylvania Railroad
28:Thomas Shields Clarke
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681:Alma Adelaide Clarke
256:Spanish–American War
181:in Madrid, at which
89:École des Beaux-Arts
57:Princeton University
36:, in San Francisco.
546:"The Cider Press,"
325:Louis Semple Clarke
298:Century Association
146:. He was awarded a
694:"A House At Lenox"
290:National Arts Club
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769:1920 deaths
764:1860 births
631:Ship's Bell
425:bell (1898)
314:Wilson Eyre
238:of Captain
202:Later works
107:Early works
85:Henri Chapu
743:Categories
619:Dewey Arch
505:References
244:Dewey Arch
226:– for the
208:caryatides
423:Princeton
329:sparkplug
265:Princeton
40:Education
309:"Jack."
304:Personal
296:and the
242:for the
260:gunboat
93:atelier
607:Spring
335:Legacy
292:, the
288:, the
276:Honors
224:Winter
220:Autumn
216:Summer
212:Spring
476:Notes
348:(PDF)
236:staff
69:Paris
421:USS
339:The
263:USS
79:and
721:at
95:of
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656:^
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210:–
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