Heinz Warneke
Heinrich Johann Dietrich "Heinz" Warneke (June 30, 1895 – 1983) was a German-born American sculptor, best remembered as an animalier, or sculptor of animals. His role in the direct carving movement "assured him a place in the annals of 20th-century American sculpture."[1]: 13
Warneke created a large number of works for the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. These include the Last Supper Tympanum over the South Portal, the Saint Alban trumeau figure, and more than ninety minor works: sculpted column capitals, bosses, corbels, keystones, heads, flowers, etc.[1]: 190–94 The Prodigal Son (1932-39), one of his most touching sculptures, is located in the Bishop's Garden.
Warneke's works are in the collections of American art museums, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Chrysler Museum of Art. His animal sculptures are in the National Zoo and the Philadelphia Zoo, and in sculpture gardens such as Brookgreen Gardens.
Warneke's most famous work is the Nittany Lion (1942) at Pennsylvania State University.
Life and Career
Warneke was born in Hagen bei Leeste, a small village near Bremen, Germany. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin, Germany, where his teachers included Karl Blossfeldt.[2][1]: 22
Warneke served in the German Army, but was a non-combatant in World War I—managing a cemetery in Bucharest, Romania from 1914 to 1918.[3] He oversaw the mostly-Turkish prisoners of war who were brought in to dig graves and carve headstones.[4]
In 1923, Warneke emigrated to the United States at New York City, and settled in St. Louis, Missouri.[5]
United States
Warneke had his first American exhibition at the St. Louis Public Library, in December 1923.[6] The works were small-scale animal figures, that the St. Louis Post-Dispatch pronounced "extraordinary."[6] According to a 1935 biographical sketch published by the U.S. Treasury Department: “His first work in America was a large stone [sic] eagle, 48 feet across the façade of the Masonic Temple in Fort Scott, Kansas.”[7]
From 1927 to 1930, Warneke lived in Paris, where he created social-realist, art-deco, and primitivist sculptures. He became a naturalized citizen after returning to the U.S. in 1930, and undertook multiple commissions for the Works Progress Administration.[5]
Warneke operated his own art school in New York City, 1940-42.[8] After winning first prize at the Corcoran Gallery of Art's 1943 Artists Annual Show in Washington, D.C.,[8] he became head of sculpture at the Corcoran's school.[9] From 1943 to 1968, he taught at both the Corcoran school and George Washington University,[10] also in Washington, D.C.
Method
In addition to carving in traditional media, such as wood, stone and ivory, Warneke carved in unusual media, such as iron, brass and aluminum, and even common brick.[11] Photographs of his carved brick sculptures illustrate Richard F. Bach’s 1928 article, “Our Industrial Art: Manufacture and Mechano-facture,” in the Journal of the American Institute of Architects.[12]
With all of the brass and iron models, Mr. Warneke explains, the method of working is the same. First a rough plaster cast is given to the foundry. When a crude sketch in brass is returned to the artist he begins to carve it, first simplifying the larger planes, and then, with tools finer than the rasp or large file used before, modeling the ultimate surface. It is actually a work of carving, for the first rough block is merely a larger, vaguer piece of metal, yet is better adapted to the speed of the work than a square chunk would be.[13]
Warneke created works of unprecedented scale and weight, such as his life-sized African Elephant and Calf (1962) for the Philadelphia Zoo.[14]
Personal
Warneke emigrated to the United States in 1923, and lived with friends of relatives in the large German-American community in St. Louis, Missouri.[6] Edward T. Hall, one of Warneke's first benefactors, was an executive at Purina Mills (pet & livestock food) in St. Louis, and commissioned him to create animal sculptures as prizes for a company contest.[1]: 173
Warneke met and fell in love with Hall's wife, painter Jessie Gilroy Hall.[15] She eventually divorced her husband, and married Warneke in March 1927.[6] Twelve-year-old Edward T. Hall Jr. remained with his father, while five-year-old Priscilla Hall went with her mother.[16] The Warnekes moved to Paris—"it is clear that leaving the country also helped put Saint Louis and the scandal of Jessie's divorce far behind them."[1]: 50 They had returned to the United States and were living in New York City in 1930, when he became a naturalized American citizen.[17][8]
During the 1930s, Warneke’s studio was at No. 12 Washington Mews, one street north of Washington Square Park.[18] In 1931, the Warnekes purchased a farm in East Haddam, Connecticut, that the couple would own for the rest of their lives.[19] After giving up his New York City studio, Warneke converted the farm's barn into his studio, c.1940.[3] He later maintained a residence in Washington, D.C. during the decades that he was teaching there.[20]
Following 55 years of marriage, Jessie Gilroy Warneke died in East Haddam, Connecticut in 1982.[5] Warneke's final sculpture was their shared grave marker—"The image on the stone is of the two of them planting a tree together."[21] Heinz Warneke died of a heart attack on August 16, 1983, in a retirement home in Madison, Connecticut.[22]
Works
Harlem River Houses
Public housing in New York City was segregated by race into the 1950s. Warneke created sculpture for the Harlem River Houses, part of an effort by the Federal Government to provide high-quality urban housing for working-class Blacks. Design critic for The New Yorker, Lewis Mumford, praised the results:
“[T]he trees set about the ample open spaces in the fashion of the Luxembourg Garden; and the handsome sculpture by Heinz Warneke, the penguins round about the central wading pool and the wrestling bears on the east side of Seventh Avenue. The gracious austerity of the architecture magnifies the importance of each variation, and the sculpture is “functional” in a practical as well as an aesthetic sense, since the cast stone which composes it will be improved in finish by being handled and climbed over by children. ... Here in short, is the equipment for decent living that every modern neighborhood needs: sunlight, air, safety, play space, meeting space, and living space.[23]
Warneke's two larger-than-life kneeling-figure sculptures were unexpectedly controversial. The male figure depicted a shirtless man with a sledgehammer; the female figure depicted a woman holding a baby and accompanied by a dog. The committee representing the future tenants "considered Warneke's portrayal of a black man as a laborer degrading."[1]: 83 The statues' names also reinforced stereotypes, and were changed: Man, the Provider became Black Worker, and then Young Man.[24] Woman, the Mother and Housekeeper—which was captioned "Colored Concrete Statue Motherhood" in a 1941 photograph[25]—was changed to Negro Mother and Child, and then Mother and Child.[26]
Warneke's other cast-stone sculptures at the site were two examples of Tussling Bears, one in the West Courtyard and the other in the River Courtyard, and four examples of Penguin, which ringed the wading pool in the Central Courtyard.[27] In a 1979 photograph accompanying the National Register of Historic Places nomination form, only one of the four Penguin sculptures was intact; another was headless, and the other two were missing or had been removed.[28] In a 2024 restoration of the Central Courtyard, the wading pool was restored (without sculpture), and the Mother and Child kneeling figure was removed.[29]
Nittany Lion
The Nittany Lion has been Penn State's mascot since 1907. Thanks to advocacy in the student newspaper, momentum for a Nittany Lion statue was growing in the Fall of 1939. Fine Arts instructor Francis E. Hyslop wrote to three sculptors inquiring about their interest in the potential project. On April 22, 1940, the outgoing Class of 1940 voted to make the Nittany Lion sculpture their class gift, and $5,340 was raised for it.
The committee for the project was formed in February 1941, and Warneke, the only one of the three sculptors still involved, submitted models in six different poses in April. His favorite pose was unanimously approved, and the terms of his contract were negotiated over several weeks. His selection as sculptor was announced in August 1941: “The Pennsylvania State College has just commissioned Heinz Warneke, American sculptor ... to carve a lion out of Indiana limestone on the campus at Penn State."[30] Painter Henry Varnum Poor had painted murals for a Penn State building, and turned his work process into a weeks-long interactive dialogue with students. Warneke agreed to do the same, to carve the figure outdoors and in place the following summer.
A 13-ton block of Indiana limestone was trucked up to the top of Burrowes Road in June 1942, and deposited on the selected site. Using Warneke's full-sized plaster model, his assistant, stonecutter Joseph Garatti, roughed out the figure in three dimensions. Warneke spent the next four months finish-carving the figure on site. The Nittany Lion Shrine was dedicated on October 24, 1942, during halftime of the football game against Colgate University.[31] Penn State won the game.
“The lion’s right ear was defaced in 1978 when vandals used some sort of blunt instrument to chip it off the statue. Warneke returned to the university at the age of 84 to sculpt a replacement.”[32] Warneke's 8.5-inch-long (11.1 cm.) terracotta model for the Nittany Lion is in the Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State.[33][34]
Washington National Cathedral
Warneke's relationship with Washington National Cathedral began in the 1950s, when he participated in a limited competition among invited sculptors to design the tympanum for the South Portal.[35] His winning entry featured a tableau of The Last Supper—with Christ standing before a perspective-distorted curving table of seated disciples—and a three-panel frieze of The Road to Emmaus.[35] Roger Morigi (with Edward H. Ratti) carved the 17-foot-tall limestone tympanum in situ from scaffolding.[35] Warneke modeled his Saint Alban trumeau figure (1959-1961) for the pier below the tympanum, and Morigi carved it in limestone.[36]
Warneke also modeled and Morigi carved a work in memory of Joseph Ratti, one of the cathedral's stonecarvers, who died in a 1955 fall from scaffolding.[37] Located in the stairway of the south transept,[1]: 190–91 the memorial depicts Ratti carving a never-to-be-finished gargoyle.[38]
In 1961, Coleman Jennings purchased Warneke's The Prodigal Son for $10,000, and donated it to the Cathedral in memory of his parents.[39] The sculpture was placed in the Bishop's Garden.[8] The following year, Warneke modeled two keystones and thirty-one bosses for the Cathedral's interior.[40][41] In 1963, Dean of the Cathedral Francis B. Sayre Jr. commissioned Warneke to create figural groups of Native Americans as capitals for the five columns that surround the Cathedral’s Garth.[42] Sayre was a step-grandson of former-First Lady Edith Wilson, and he wished to honor her Native American heritage.[42] Warneke's groups represent peoples of the Pacific Northwest, The Arctic, The Northeast, The Great Plains, and The Southwest.[42]
African Elephant and Calf
In November 1958, Warneke was invited by the Fairmount Park Commission to participate in a competition among six sculptors to create an animal sculpture for the Philadelphia Zoological Gardens.[1]: 145–46 His winning submission was a life-sized mother elephant and her newborn calf depicted in a tender moment—preparing to nurse for the first time:[43]: 68 "I want to create a statue that will speak forever of how touching, how funny, how gorgeous motherhood is, even in such an awkward and huge beast as an elephant."[1]: 147
Warneke intended for the work to be carved from a single block of granite, but he was unable to find an American quarry that could provide a block large enough.[1]: 147–48 He learned that gray granite from Bergen, Norway would closely match the color of an elephant's hide,[44] but carving the work in a foreign country and shipping it back to the U.S. would exceed the project's $37,000 budget.[1]: 148 Members of the Park Commission demonstrated their support for Warneke by making donations that doubled his budget.[1]: 149 Utilizing Warneke's full-size plaster model, the sculpture was rough-carved in Oslo by Norwegian stonecutters, who removed tens of tons of waste stone. The process took more than a year, and Warneke made minor changes as problems arose.[1]: 148
U.S. sculptor Heinz Warneke is in Oslo supervising work on a huge sculpture, depicting a mother elephant and her baby, for the zoo in Philadelphia, Pa. Hewn from a 60-ton block of Norwegian granite, it is being carved by A/L Steinskulptur."[45]
When completed, the rough-carved sculpture was hoisted onto a freighter and shipped to the United States.[46][44] It was unloaded at the docks in South Philadelphia.[47] On October 22, 1962, the sculpture was hoisted onto the bed of a tractor-trailer, which slowly drove it up Broad Street, the city's main north-south artery, and delivered it to the zoo in West Fairmount Park.[48] “The arrival of Elephant and her Calf [sic] by Heinz Werneke in 1962 was greeted with as much fanfare as a new live specimen.”[49] Warneke resumed his finish-carving of the sculpture at the zoo.[1]: 149
African Elephant and Calf was dedicated seven months after its arrival, on May 25, 1963.[50] The zoo brought out a young elephant and a calf to be photographed with the sculpture, and with the sculptor.[44] LIFE Magazine covered the event:
Last week in Philadelphia nature was busy imitating art – or vice versa. For a moment it was hard to tell which was which when some residents of the local zoo paused to look over the new tenants in Fairmount Park. But nature gave it away; her elephants moved. Art’s stayed put for they had been carved from a solid block of granite.[44]
According to a trade journal: "This is the largest monolithic, free-standing granite sculpture in the United States."[51]
Recognition
Exhibitions
While living in Paris in the late-1920s, Warneke exhibited at the Salon des Tuileries.[8] He exhibited five works at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927, including Rearing Horse that was illustrated in the catalogue (as Prancing Percheron).[52] Warneke exhibited semi-regularly at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, fourteen times between 1928 and 1958.[53] He exhibited sporadically at the National Academy of Design in New York City, four times between 1935 and 1949.[17] He exhibited relatively frequently at the Whitney Museum of American Art in Manhattan, New York City, eleven times between 1936 and 1952.[1]: 206–13
Warneke loaned The Prodigal Son to the Whitney Museum's 1939 Annual Exhibition in January and February;[54] then loaned it from April to October to the 1939 World's Fair in Queens, New York City.[1]: 208 He loaned Pelicans: Contentment in the Sun (1928) to the National Sculpture Society's 7-month Annual Exhibition, April to October 1939, at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco.[55] Warneke loaned four works to the Philadelphia Museum of Art's 5-month exhibition, Sculpture International 1940—Tussling Bears (1936, plaster), New-Born Deer (1925), Orang Outang Thinking (1933), and The Prodigal Son (1932-39).[56] He loaned the c.1931 version of Wild Boars to the Museum of Modern Art's July 1941 exhibition, Animals in Art: Designing a Stage Setting.[57] The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. hosted a "Special Exhibition of Sculpture by Heinz Warneke," December 1, 1942 to January 1, 1943.[1]: 210
Werneke loaned The Prodigal Son (c.1932-39) to MoMA's 1943 exhibition, Art in Progress, celebrating the 15th anniversary of the museum's founding. MoMA placed the work in the sculpture garden, where it remained for several years.[1]: 211 Religion columnist Walter L. Nathan saw The Prodigal Son at MoMA in 1946, and wrote movingly about it.[58]
The Lyman Allyn Museum in New London, Connecticut hosted a retrospective exhibition of Warneke's work, November 11, 1956 to December 2, 1956.[1]: 213–14 The Corcoran Gallery hosted a retrospective exhibition of Warneke work, February 7 to March 3, 1957.[1]: 215 The Georgetown University Art Gallery in Washington, D.C. hosted "Heinz Warneke Looks Back: An Exhibition of the Artist's Personal Selection of His Sculpture," November 30 - December 19, 1967.[1]: 216–17 Included (and for sale) were plaster models for several of the works he sculpted for Washington National Cathedral.
Awards
In 1924, the St. Louis Artists’ Guild awarded Warneke an Honorable Mention for Maiden and Faun.[59] The following year, the Guild awarded him its First Prize and Medal for New-Born Deer (1925).[1]: 199 The Art Institute of Chicago awarded Warneke its 1930 Logan Medal and $2,500 purchase prize for The Water Carrier (1927).[60] PAFA awarded Warneke its 1935 Widener Gold Medal for the c.1931 version of Wild Boars.[8] The Society of Washington Artists awarded Warneke its 1943 First Prize for New-Born Deer (1925).[61]
Honors
Warneke was elected a member of the National Sculpture Society in 1936.[1]: 104 The Lyme Art Association in Old Lyme, Connecticut, elected him a member in 1937.[62] The National Academy of Design elected Warneke an Associate member in 1939, and an Academician in 1966.[63] Ivan Olinsky painted his NAD diploma portrait.[64] What is now the American Academy of Arts and Letters elected him a member in 1953.[65]
Warneke was one of the three American sculptors selected to judge the 1938 national competition to design the Jefferson nickel, (Sidney Waugh and Albert Stewart were the others).[66] He was one of the three judges for the 1939 first round of the national competition to design a Thomas Jefferson statue for the Jefferson Memorial. Architect Henri Gabriel Marceau, sculptor James Earle Fraser, and Warneke whittled the list of 101 applicants down to 6 semi-finalists. From these, the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission selected 3 finalists in the 1940 second round; and in the 1941 final round chose Rudulph Evans the winner.[67]
The Archives of American Art recorded a 1982 interview with Warneke, conducted by Robert Brown.[68][4] Heinz Warneke's papers are housed at Syracuse University.[69] Family papers are at the East Haddam Historical Society & Museum in East Haddam, Connecticut. The historical society built a new wing to house its collection of Warneke's sculptures.[70]
List of works
Animalia
- Rearing Stallion (Prancing Pergeron) (1922, African wood), unlocated. Exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927.[1]: 172
- Harneke carved two replicas, one in ebony and the other in oak.[1]: 172
- Hissing Geese (1926), Art Institute of Chicago[71]
- Elegance (c.1927, marble), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.[72] The subject is a seated cat.
- Pelicans: Contentment in the Sun (1927), Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk Virginia[73]
- Colt (1928, polished brass), Brookgreen Gardens, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina[74]
- Mother Goat and Kids (1929), National Academy of Design, Manhattan, New York City[75]
- Wild Boars (1929, Belgian marble), Art Institute of Chicago, height: 12.5 inches.[76]
- Wild Boars (c.1931, Belgian marble), Smithsonian American Art Museum, height: 18.75 inches.[77] Warneke carved this second version with dimensions 50% larger than the original. A 1993 bequest to SAAM from Warneke's Estate.
- Orang Outang Thinking (c.1933, marble), Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts[78]
- Tussling Bears, aka Wrestling Bears, Tumbling Bears (1936, red granite), National Zoological Park, Washington, D.C.[79]
- Tussling Bears (1936, cast stone), Harlem River Houses, Manhattan, New York City.[80] Two replicas in cast stone.
- Tussling Bears (1936, posthumous 1989 cast, bronze), K. T. Murphy Elementary School, Stamford, Connecticut[81]
- Penguin (c.1938, cast stone), Harlem River Houses, Manhattan, New York City[27]
- Nittany Lion Shrine (1942), Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania[82]
- 3/4-size versions of Warneke's Nittany Lion are located on many of Penn State's satellite campuses.
- New-Born Deer (1943, brass). Awarded First Prize by the Society of Washington Artists in 1943.[61]
- World War II Eagle (c.1946, fieldstone). War memorial opposite Lyme Town Hall, Lyme, Connecticut[83]
- African Elephant and Calf (1962, Bergen granite), Philadelphia Zoo, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[50] Dedicated May 25, 1963
- Wildcat (1967-68, bronze), Owen J. Roberts High School, Chester County, Pennsylvania.[1]: 196 Created in collaboration with Don Turano, Warneke's former student at the Corcoran Gallery of Art School.[84] Dedicated 1969
- Altoona Mountain Lion (1972, cast copper), Altoona Area High School, Altoona, Pennsylvania.[85] Dedicated May 7, 1972
Figural works
- Juan Pino, Tesuque Indian (1925, bronze), New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, gift of Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. Hall[86][87]
- The Boxer (c.1926, bronze), height: 19 in. (48.3 cm.), signed: H. Warneke
- Peasant Mother and Babe (1928, teakwood), unlocated. “Warneke’s PEASANT MOTHER AND BABE, carved in teakwood, is similar in feeling, but is unlike much of his recent sculpture … The larger masses, monumental in their proportions, as Warneke models them, are perfectly articulated. In the form of the mother they are imposing, and irresistibly lovely in the nursing child.”[88]
- The Water Carrier (1928-29, marble), ex coll. Art Institute of Chicago, unlocated.[89][90] Winner of the 1930 Logan Medal and $2,500 purchase prize from the Art Institute of Chicago.[60]
- The Prodigal Son (c.1932-39, granite), Bishop's Garden, Washington National Cathedral, Washington, D.C.[91] Purchased by Coleman Jennings in 1961, who donated it to the Cathedral in memory of his parents.[39]
- Portrait of Judge John Bassett Moore (1933, terra-cotta), head and bust, University of Virginia Law School, Charlottesville, Virginia. Exhibited at Whitney Museum of American Art, April-May, 1940.
- The Immigrant (1933), Ellen Phillips Samuel Memorial, East Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[92]
- Express Mail Carrier (1936, carved aluminum), Ariel Rios Federal Building, Washington, D.C.[93]
- Express Mail Carrier (1936, painted plaster), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. Warneke donated his painted plaster version to SAAM in 1980.[94]
- Express Mail Carrier (1982, cast aluminum), Railroaders Memorial Museum, Altoona, Pennsylvania. Cast by the Modern Art Foundry, with permission of the artist, as a gift to the museum.[1]: 182 Dedicated April 3, 1982
- Liberty Panel (c.1936, carved aluminum), Elevator Lobby, Ariel Rios Federal Building, Washington, D.C.[95] Three pairs of hands, shackled to a heavy chain (Nazism?), reach out to the Liberty Bell.[96]
- Young Man (1937, cast stone), Harlem River Houses, Manhattan, New York City[97]
- Mother and Child (c.1937-38, cast stone), Harlem River Houses, Manhattan, New York City[98]
- Relief Portrait of Allen C. Dulles (1967-68, marble), CIA Headquarters, Langley, Virginia[1]: 196
- The Maiden and the Unicorn (1969, bronze), height: 34.5 in. (87.6 cm.)
- Working Together (1985-86) Lyme Municipal Building, Lyme, Connecticut.[99] Four nude men pushing a boulder. Warneke's gift to Lyme, Connecticut, commemorating the 300th anniversary of the town's founding.
Architectural works
- Lions flanking 11th Street entrance, Seal of City of St. Louis, Eagle figures (1924, cast stone), City Club Building, St. Louis, Missouri.[1]: 173 Removed c.1957.[100]
- Double-headed Eagle (c.1923-25, terra cotta), Scottish Rite Temple, Fort Scott, Kansas.[101] Warneke's Art Deco-Pueblo-style eagle stretches across the building's facade with a wingspan of 48 feet.[7]
- Lewis and Clark Expedition Frieze (1939, cast stone), Auditorium, Department of Interior Building, Washington, D.C. The vertical frieze is 123 inches tall, 48 inches wide, and weighs 1 ton.[8]
- Church furniture and relief panels (1958-60, carved wood), Trinity Episcopal Church, Upperville, Virginia.[102] Warneke collaborated with H. Page Cross, architect of the church.[103]
- Each pew end is carved with a plant variety native to Virginia—Oak, Wheat, Ferns, Grapes, Dogwood, Pear, Thistle, Holly, Columbine, Rose, Trillium, Ivy, Cherry, Lily. The 14 plant carvings are repeated over the 38 pew ends (19 on each side of the center aisle).[1]: 140
- The pulpit is ringed by 5 carved figures of famous preachers: St. Chrysostom, Martin Luther, John Donne, Jonathan Edwards, Phillips Brooks.[1]: 137
- Column capitals and impost blocks, (1961-64, carved limestone), Trinity Episcopal Church, Upperville, Virginia[104]
- Suffer Little Children Flower Pedestal (1962-65, carved wood), Trinity Episcopal Church, Upperville, Virginia.[1]: 144–45 Jesus walking with 2 small children.
Washington National Cathedral
- Earth double capital (1951-53, limestone), Mellon Bay, Washington National Cathedral
- Sea double capital (1951-53, limestone), Mellon Bay, Washington National Cathedral
- The Last Supper Tympanum (1953–59, limestone), South Portal, Washington National Cathedral[35]
- Joseph Ratti Memorial (1955-56, limestone), stairway of South Transcept, Washington National Cathedral[38][1]: 190–91
- Saint Alban trumeau figure (1959–61, limestone), South Portal, Washington National Cathedral.[36] Located directly below The Last Supper Tympanum.
- God as Creator Keystone (1962, limestone), Washington National Cathedral[40]
- Praise Him and Magnify Him Forever Keystone (1962, limestone), South Transcept, Washington National Cathedral[41]
-
The Immigrant (1933), East Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
-
"Colored Concrete Statue Motherhood," (1941), Photograph #41.239.4, Museum of the City of New York
-
Four Penguins (c.1938, cast stone), surrounding the central wading pool, Harlem River Houses, Manhattan, New York City
-
Lewis & Clark Expedition (1939), Main Interior Building, Washington, D.C.
-
Great Plains Tribes Capital (1963-64), Garth, Washington National Cathedral
-
Relief Portrait of Allen C. Dulles (1969), CIA Headquarters, Langley, Virginia
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Cunningham, Mary Mullen, Heinz Warneke (1895–1983): A Sculptor First and Last, University of Delaware Press, Newark, DE, 1994.
- ^ McGlauflin, Alice Coe, editor, Who's Who in American Art: Volume II, 1938–1939, The American Federation of Arts, Inc., Washington D.C., 1937. p. 548
- ^ a b Creative Places: Arts & Letters in 20th Century Connecticut, Heinz Warneke
- ^ a b Oral History interview with Heinze Warneke, from Archives of American Art.
- ^ a b c "Heinz Warneke Papers". Syracuse University Libraries. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Jackie R. Esposito and Steven L. Herb, The Nittany Lion: An Illustrated Tale (University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1997)
- ^ a b “The Winners: Biographical Notes on the Sculptors and Painters who won the Competition for Statues and Murals to be placed in The Post Office Department,” Section of Painting and Sculpture, Public Works Branch, Procurement Division, Treasury Department, Washington, D.C., Bulletin Number 6 (October-November 1935), p. 10.
- ^ a b c d e f g David W. Look, AIA, and Carole L. Perrault, The Interior Building: Its Architecture and It’s Art (U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Preservation Assistance Division, 1986.), pp. 121-22.
- ^ “HEINZ WARNEKE, sculptor, and PEGGY BACON, etcher, painter and illustrator, have joined the faculty of the Corcoran School of Art in Washington for the 1942-43 term.” Pictures on Exhibit Magazine, (New York: Pictures Publishing Company), vol. 6, p. 22.
- ^ "Heinz Warneke". National Museum of American Art. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
- ^ "What the Critics Say of the New York Season," The Art Digest (Hopewell, NJ: The Art Digest, Inc.), vol. 2, no. 13 (April 1, 1928), p. 21.
- ^ Washington, D.C.: Journal of The American Institute of Architects, vol. 16, no. 5 (May 1928), pp. 185-88.
- ^ Robert Tschaegle, “Brick and Brass, Wood and Stone: The Sculptural Art of Heinz Warneke”, The Mentor, vol. 16, no. 4 (May 1928), (Springfield, OH: The Crowell Publishing Company), p. 34.
- ^ Janet Ruth Falon, "Acres of Art in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park," The Washington Post, April 6, 1986.
- ^ Jessie Gilroy (Warneke) scrapbook, Bryn Mawr College Archives.
- ^ Priscilla Hall Waters Norton obituary, from Guilford Funeral Home.
- ^ a b Peter Hastings Falk, ed. The Annual Exhibition Record of the National Academy of Design, 1901-1950 (Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1990) pp. 526-527.
- ^ New York University, Greenwich Village Artists (self-guided walking tour), Grey Art Museum, (year).
- ^ Warneke House and Studio, from Creative Places.
- ^ Warneke listed his address as "1063 31st St., N.W., Wash., D.C.", in PAFA catalogues from 1946 to 1958. This was a 3-story rowhouse near Georgetown University, with the former stable converted into a studio. See Peter Hastings Falk, ed., The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Volume 3, 1914--1968 (Madison CT: Sound View Press, 1989), p. 475.
- ^ Robert Hubbard and Kathleen Hubbard, Hidden History of Middlesex County, Connecticut (Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2018), p. 125.
- ^ "Heinz Warneke, Ex-Chief At Corcoran, Dies" The Washington Post, August 17, 1983.
- ^ Robert Wojtowicz, ed., Sidewalk Critic: Lewis Mumford’s Writings on New York (New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 1998), p. 211.
- ^ Barbara Melosh, ed., Gender and American History Since 1890 (New York, NY: Routledge, 1992), List of Illustrations.
- ^ Lacy Schutz, "Affordable New York: Hudson River Houses," Museum of the City of New York Blog, November 10, 2015.
- ^ Chapter 4. “When Public Housing Was White: William Lescaze and the Americanization of the International Style,” Charles L. Davis II, Building Character: The Racial Politics of Modern Architectural Style, (Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019), note 86.
- ^ a b Penguin, for Harlem Housing Project, from SIRIS.
- ^ NRHP Nomination Form: Harlem River Houses, photographs by Stephen L. Senigo, photo #3.
- ^ "Harlem River Houses Celebrates Central Fountain Restoration and New Playgrounds," The NYCHA Journal, Mat 21, 2024, from New York City Housing Authority.
- ^ “Warneke at Penn State,” Magazine of Art, (Washington, D.C.: American Federation of Arts), vol. 34, no. 8 (August 1941), p. 395.
- ^ Derek J. Sherwood, Nittany Nightmare: The Sex Murders of 1938 – 1940 and the Panic at Penn State (Jefferson, NC: Exposit Books, 2019), p. 215.
- ^ Thomas E. Range II, Penn State University (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2016), p. 41.
- ^ Model for Nittany Lion, from Palmer Museum of Art.
- ^ Model for Nittany Lion, from SIRIS.
- ^ a b c d The Last Supper, from SIRIS.
- ^ a b St. Alban from SIRIS.
- ^ R. Andrew Bittner, Building Washington National Cathedral (Arcadia Publishing, 2015), p. 57.
- ^ a b Wendy True Gasch, Guide to Gargoyles and Other Grotesques (Washington National Cathedral, 2003).
- ^ a b Choukas-Bradley, Melanie (June 9, 1997). "Reflection". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 14, 2020.
- ^ a b "God as Creator Keystone by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ a b "Praise Him and Magnify Him Forever Keystone by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ a b c Kevin Eckstrom, “Celebrating Native American Heritage Month,” Cathedral Connects blog, November 3, 2023.
- ^ Jessie Donahue and Erik Trump, Political Animals: Public Art in American Zoos and Aquariums (Landham, MD: Lexington Books, 2007)
- ^ a b c d "Zoo Puts on a Mammoth Match-up," LIFE Magazine, June 7, 1963, p. 40b. Scroll down to pages 45 & 48 to see photos of the block of granite, the wooden armatures that supported the clay models, and the near-finished sculpture being hoisted onto the freighter in Oslo.
- ^ "News in Brief," News of Norway, September 13, 1962, p. 120.
- ^ "News in Brief," News of Norway, November 15, 1962, p. 155.
- ^ A photograph of the sculpture being unloaded in Philadelphia is illustrated in: Fairmount Park Art Association, Ninety-first Annual Report of the Board of Trustees (Philadelphia, PA: 1963), pp. 14-15.
- ^ "African Cow Elephant and Calf making its way down Broad Street enroute from the Philadelphia shipyard to the Philadelphia Zoo," caption on a 22 October 1962 photograph, Box 18, Folder , Archives of the Fairmount Park Art Association, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
- ^ Cynthia Ott, HABS historian, Philadelphia Zoological Gardens, HABS No. PA-6211, (Washington, D.C.: Historic American Buildings Survey, Summer 1996), p. 61.
- ^ a b African Elephant and Calf from SIRIS.
- ^ "Granite Elephant," American Art in Stone (trade journal), vol. 63, no. 6 (June, 1963), (Braintree, MA: George P. Ford, publisher), p. 37.
- ^ Art Institute of Chicago: Catalogue of the Fortieth Annual Exhibition of American Paintings and Sculpture, October 27 to December 14, 1927, cat. nos. 292 – 296.
- ^ Peter Hastings Falk, ed., The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania of the Fine Arts, Volume III, 1914-1968 (Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1989), p. 475.
- ^ 1939 Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Sculpture, Drawings and Prints, (New York, NY: Whitney Museum of American Art), p. 5, illustrated on frontispiece.
- ^ Contemporary American Sculpture: Issued for the Exhibition held by the National Sculpture Society in cooperation with The Trustees of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor (New York: Press of the Kalkhoff Company, 1939), pp. 326-27.
- ^ Sculpture International 1940, p. 16, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- ^ "Wild Boars by Heinz Warneke / American Art". MoMA. Retrieved 24 May 2025. right, bottom row
- ^ Walter L. Nathan, "Religion in Art" - "Heinz Warneke: The Return of the Prodigal Son." The Living Church, vol. 107, no. 9 (March 3, 1946), p. 22.[1]
- ^ "Art in St. Louis", The American Magazine of Art (Washington, D.C.: vol. 25, no. 2, February 1924), p. 102.
- ^ a b "Sculptor Wins First Prize at Chicago's Annual Exhibition," Art Digest, vol. 5, no. 3, (November 1, 1930), cover.
- ^ a b The Society of Washington Artists, Fifty-Second Annual Exhibition, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., January 23 to February 14, 1943, p.16.
- ^ “An important addition to the sculpture division of the Lyme association was made with today’s election of Heinz Warneke. Mr. Warneke is a member of the American Society of Painters, Sculptors and Engravers, and his works are to be found in many parts of the United States.“Lyme Art Gallery Given Wing,” Lyme Art Association, September 1937.
- ^ Heinz Warneke from National Academy of Design.
- ^ David Bernard Dearinger, Paintings and Sculptures in the Collection of the National Academy of Design, Volume I, 1826-1925 (New York and Manchester: Hudson Hills Press, 2004), pp. 428-29.
- ^ Virgil E. McMahan, The Artists of Washington, D.C., 1796-1996, Volume I: A Directory of Painters, Sculptors and Engravers Born Before 1900 (Studio House at Walbridge, 1995), p. 225.
- ^ Treasury Department Art Projects Bulletin, no. 17 (September 1938), p. 16.
- ^ Thomas Jefferson Memorial Statue in Washington, D.C. from Jefferson's Monticello.
- ^ Archives of American Art, Government and Art: A Guide to Sources in the Archives of American Art (1995), p. 160.
- ^ Heinz Warneke Papers, from Syracuse University.
- ^ East Haddam Museum Gets Grant for Warneke Wing, The Newtown Bee, September 20, 2007.
- ^ "Hissing Geese by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ "Elegance by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 21 October 2016.
- ^ Pelicans from Chrysler Museum of Art.
- ^ Colt, from SIRIS.
- ^ Mother Goat and Kids from NAD.
- ^ "Wild Boars by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ "Wild Boars". Smithsonian American Art Museum. 1931. Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ Orang Outang Thinking, from SIRIS.
- ^ "Tumbling Bears by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.[ | National Zoo: Warneke Sculpture] from Living New Deal.
- ^ Bears Playing from SIRIS.
- ^ Tumbling Bears, from Discover Stamford.
- ^ Nittany Lion from SIRIS.
- ^ World War II Eagle, from SIRIS.
- ^ ”World Famous Sculptors Create Wildcat for Owen J. Roberts,” The Pottstown Mercury, February 21, 1969.
- ^ Altoona Mountain Lion, from SIRIS
- ^ Juan Pino, Tesuque Indian, from New Mexico Museum of Art.
- ^ Juan Pino, Tesuque Indian, from SIRIS.
- ^ Rose V. S. Berry, “The Living American Sculptor and His Art,” The Argus: A Monthly Journal of the Arts, (San Francisco, CA: Argus Publishing Co.), vol. 4, no. 3 (December 1928), p. 20.
- ^ “The Forty-Third Annual American Exhibition,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago, vol. 24, no. 8 (November 1930), p. 106.
- ^ Water Carrier, from SIRIS.
- ^ Prodigal Son from SIRIS.
- ^ The Immigrant from SIRIS.
- ^ "Express Mail Carrier by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 24 May 2025.
- ^ "Express Mail Carrier (plaster) by Heinz Warneke / American Art". Retrieved 21 October 2016.
- ^ Joseph S. Rosapepe, “Works of Art at GAO,” General Accounting Office, The GAO Review, vol. 13, no. 2 (Spring 1978), pp. 28-34.
- ^ (New York, NY: The Art Foundation Press, Inc.) Art News, vol. 54, no. 2 (April 1955), p. 38.
- ^ Young Man, from SIRIS.
- ^ Mother and Child, from SIRIS
- ^ Working Together, from SIRIS.
- ^ City Club of St. Louis, from Built St. Louis.
- ^ Scottish Rite Temple, 110 S. Main St, Fort Scott Kansas Historic Resources Inventory, Kansas Historical Society.
- ^ Trinity Episcopal Church, Upperville, VA from SIRIS.
- ^ Sharon Cavileer, Virginia Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff (Essex, CT: Globe Pequot Press, 2013), p. 59.
- ^ Una Hanbury, “His Works Reflected in Many Ways,” (Washington, D.C.: Faith & Form: Journal of the Guild for Religious Architecture), vol. 2 (January 1969), pp. 15-19.
- ^ Eboni Farmer, “A Chiseled Place in History,” The Hartford Courant, July 19, 2008.
- ^ Our Museum, from East Haddam Historical Society Museum.