The Legacy of Frederick Hart

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Uploaded by on Sep 17, 2008

American master sculptor Frederick Hart is recognized for creating work—at once traditional in its adherence to the human figure, radical in its sensuality, and innovative in its materials—which has brought about a resurgence of interest in the human figure and in the idea of beauty in contemporary American art. Michael Novak, author of Frederick Hart: Changing Tides, wrote in 2004, The work of Frederick Hart is changing the world of art, vindicating the artists strong belief that with the new century would come changing tides in the style, form, and direction of the arts. Hart gained international stature for his The Creation Sculptures on the west façade of Washington National Cathedral, which include three tympana Ex Nihilo (Out of Nothing), Creation of Day and Creation of Night, and three trumeau figures, St. Peter, St. Paul and Adam carved in Indiana limestone. The cathedral, located in Washington, D.C. is the sixth largest Gothic cathedral in the world. The works were commissioned in 1974, and dedicated between 1978 and 1984.

One of the most visited monuments in Washington, D.C. is Harts heroic bronze statue Three Soldiers, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, dedicated by President Ronald Reagan in 1984. Hart is also represented in the U.S. Senate by the heroic marble statue of Senator Richard Russell in the rotunda of the Russell Senate Office Building; the bronze bust of Senator Strom Thurmond, installed in the Strom Thurmond Room of the Capitol Building; and the marble bust of J. Danforth Quayle created for the Senates Vice Presidential Bust Collection. Hart was also commissioned to create the James Earl Carter Presidential Statue in bronze installed at the Georgia State House, Atlanta. Hart pioneered the use of clear acrylic resin to create cast figurative sculptures. He patented the process by which one clear acrylic sculpture was embedded within another. In 1997, Hart presented a unique casting of The Cross of the Millennium to Pope John Paul II in a private ceremony at the Vatican in Rome. When it was unveiled Pope John Paul II called this sculpture a profound theological statement for our day.

Frederick Hart was articulate in describing the passion and vision that drove him to create such works of beauty. He said, I believe that art has a moral responsibility, that it must pursue something higher than itself. Art must be a part of life. It must exist in the domain of the common man. It must be an enriching, ennobling, and vital partner in the public pursuit of civilization. It should be a majestic presence in everyday life just as it was in the past.

Hart was awarded the National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to artists and arts patrons by the United States Government. The proclamation signed by President George W. Bush on November 17, 2004 states the following: For his important body of work—including the Washington National Cathedrals Creation Sculptures and the Vietnam Veterans Memorials Three Soldiers—which heralded a new age for contemporary public art. This distinction places him in the ranks of the most distinguished American artists of the twentieth century.

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  • @K4inan, Nice channel... I imagine you sculpt brilliantly! Ha. Go back to your computer games.

  • @SStheruler nonsense....

  • An artist and a craftsman, a rare things these days!!

  • Oprah999 - I've been on 5 related videos today and found your inappropriate and unqualified vitriol spewed on all of them. Please show the maturity and enlightenment of someone who understands that art speaks in many forms and that the Veterans of the Vietnam War, have chosen how they would like to be represented. It is not for you, or I, to say. History and the American people have already judged the talent, heart and contributions of Mr. Hart and the vote is overwhelmingly positive.

  • The late artist Eugene J. Martin always spoke highly of Frederick Hart as being a wonderful person and dedicated artist. Frederick Hart was a generous friend to Eugene Martin in the late 1960' when he would let Eugene share his loft in Washington D.C. Both artists met at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington D.C. but lost contact with one another later in life.

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