John Burroughs
John Burroughs
Artist
Cartaino di Sciarrino Pietro
American, 1886-1918
Place of OriginUnited States
Date1918
DimensionsSculpture: 47 × 54 1/4 × 32 in. (119.4 × 137.8 × 81.3 cm)
121.9 × 281.9 × 188 cm (48 × 111 × 74 in.)
121.9 × 281.9 × 188 cm (48 × 111 × 74 in.)
Mediumbronze
ClassificationSculpture
Credit LineGift of William E. Bock
Object number
1918.2
On View
Toledo Museum of Art (2445 Monroe Street), Sculpture Garden
Collections
Published ReferencesToledo Museum News "Mr. Bock's gift of the Burroughs Statue," no. 37, October 1920, pp. 446, 447, repr. on cover.
- Sculpture
Who was Who in America, Library Edition, vol. I, 1897-1942, Chicago 1943, p. 973.
"Cultural service to the Community," The Ohio Bell Voice, vol. 12, no. 3, May 1965, repr. (col.) p. 8.
Coates, Ruth Allison, Great American Naturalists, Minneapolis, 1974, repr. p. 62.
Campen, Richard N., Outdoor Sculpture in Ohio, Chagrin Falls, 1980, p. 77, repr.
Curtin, John, "The Art Museum's Lonely Sentry," Toledo Magazine, The Blade, June 11, 1978, pp. 20, 22, repr. (col.) p. 20 (in scrapbook).
Label TextFamous naturalist John Burroughs (1837–1921) visited the Toledo area in the 1910s to design a garden for admirer and patron William E. Bock of Rossford. Bock also commissioned for the garden this sculpted portrait by Cartaino di Sciarrino Pietro, a mostly self-taught artist born in Palermo, Sicily. After the sculpture was finished, Bock decided it should be enjoyed by the public and so presented it to the Toledo Museum of Art for the benefit of the city’s school children. On April 12, 1918—declared “Burrough’s Day” by the mayor—20,000 children gathered at the Museum to honor Burroughs as he attended the dedication of the sculpture. His pose, peering into the distance through a cluster of trees, is a fitting one for the nature lover. Burroughs believed firmly that the wonders of the natural world open up through careful and quiet observation—what he called “sharp looking.”Pietro da Cortona
1629/1630
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