Sarah T. Bolton | |
---|---|
Artist | Emma Sangernebo |
Year | 1941 |
Dimensions | 120 cm (49 in × 31 1/8 in) |
Location | Indiana State House, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States |
39°46′07″N 86°09′45″W / 39.768611°N 86.1625°W | |
Owner | State of Indiana |
Sarah T. Bolton is a public artwork by American artist Emma Sangernebo (1877–1969).[1] It is located on the second floor of the rotunda in the Indiana State House, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. It is a bronze sculptural relief of Indiana poet Sarah Tittle Bolton, née Barrett (December 18, 1814 – August 4, 1893) and contains four lines from Bolton's poem "Indiana".
Description
Sarah T. Bolton is a cast bronze relief. The portrait of Bolton occupies the middle ground of the plaque and depicts Bolton in a ¾ view. In the upper left corner of the plaque are four lines from Bolton's "Indiana." Below the portrait is the plaque's dedication. Sangernebo's signature and the year 1941 are below the portrait to the right.
The broad face is free of lines and wrinkles, and the features of her eyes, nose, and mouth are finely rendered. Her hair is parted in the center with a single pin-curl at her temple. A fringed cap rests half-way back on her head and is folded behind her ear. There is a cameo at her throat, and the collar is fringed. Her shawl and bodice are plain and without definition or folds. Under the right breast are Bolton's life dates, 1814–1893.
At the top of the relief are four lines from Bolton's poem "Indiana:"
The Winds of heaven never fanned
The circling sunlight never spanned
The Borders of a better landThan our own Indiana.
Below the portrait is the dedication:
In Honor of Sarah Tittle Bolton Indiana's
Pioneer Poet – in commemoration of
Her creative work this plaque is
Placed by the Indiana Branch –National League – American Penwomen.
The plaque is 49 inches (120 cm) tall, 31+1⁄8 inches (79 cm) wide, and approximately 3⁄4 inch (1.9 cm) deep. The ground of the relief is dull and has a pebbled surface. The face and letter fronts have a polished, shiny patina. The relief is mounted to the wall with four socket cap screws, one in each upper corner and one on each side approximately six inches from the bottom. The right side screw is missing. The Indiana State Museum reported on 15 May 2006 that the sculpture's condition was excellent.[1]
Historical information
Olive Inez Downing (c. 1888–1963) proposed that the Indiana Branch of the League of American Pen Women commission a sculpture honoring Sarah T. Bolton and arrange to install in the State House.[2] Sarah T. Bolton was known as the "Pioneer Poet Laureate of Indiana."[3] Her poems are published in Poems (1865), Life and Poems of Sarah Tittle Bolton (1880), and Songs of a Lifetime (1892). Her most well known poem is “Paddle Your Own Canoe.”[4]
Emma Sangernebo, née Elyes (1877–1969), was a well-known local artist trained at Herron Art School, Indianapolis.[5] She was both a sculptor and painter. A member of the National League of American Pen Women, she was awarded the commission.[2] Sangernebo based the sculpture on a photograph of Bolton that appeared in Bolton's Life and Poems of Sarah Tittle Bolton (1880). She completed the sculpture in Chicago where it was also cast.[2]
The sculpture was installed on October 18, 1941 in the northeast niche on the second floor of the State House rotunda where it remains today. At the dedication ceremony, Bolton Mann, the great-great-grandson of Sarah T. Bolton, unveiled the relief sculpture. Walter Flandorf (1893–1949), husband of Vera Sangernebo (1902–2001), daughter of Emma and Alexander Sangernebo, put Bolton's "Paddle Your Own Canoe" to music.[2]
See also
References
- 1 2 Indiana State Museum. Engraving honoring Sarah Tittle Bolton, ID 99.2006.020.0063. 15 May 2006. Retrieved from Indiana State Museum Mimsy Database 4 December 2010.
- 1 2 3 4 Morehouse, Lucille E. (5 October 1941). "Emma Sangernebo Prepares Plaque of Sarah T. Bolton for Statehouse". Indianapolis Sunday Star.
- ↑ Downing, Olive Inez (1941). Indiana's Poet of the Wildwood. Marion, IN: Marion, IN: News Publishing Co. p. 92.
- ↑ Sage, Lorna (1999). The Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English. Cambridge University Press. pp. 76. ISBN 0-521-66813-1.
- ↑ Warkel, Harriet G. (2003). The Herron Chronicle. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34237-6.