fbpx
Wikipedia

Thomas Gaetano LoMedico

Thomas Gaetano LoMedico (July 11, 1904 – November 29, 1985) was an American sculptor and medalist.[4] Born and raised in New York City, his sculpture won awards in the 1930s and 1940s and is now in several American museum collections.

Thomas Gaetano LoMedico
Born(1904-07-11)July 11, 1904[1]
DiedNovember 29, 1985 (1985-11-30) (aged 81)[2]
NationalityAmerican
EducationBeaux Arts Institute of Design
Known forSculpture, Art Medals
SpouseLeonora Lisciandra LoMedico
AwardsSaltus Award

Life and career edit

Thomas Lo Medico was born in Upper East Side Manhattan on July 11, 1904, the son of Philip and Angelina Cimino Lo Medico.[2] His interest in the arts surfaced at a young age and while at PS 13 (Manhattan) he designed posters for neighborhood storefronts to promote the sale of WW I Liberty Bonds.[5] In 1920, at age 16, he was hired as an artist's apprentice in a New York architectural sculpture studio. In the evenings from 1920 thru 1928 he studied at the Beaux Arts Institute of Design.[2] Chartered in 1916, the Beaux Arts Institute had as its mission promotion of the Beaux-Arts architectural style and fostering of closer relationships between architects, muralists, and sculptors.[6]

In 1935, after fifteen years creating architectural sculpture, Lo Medico opened his own studio in New York City. The Great Depression made it difficult for young sculptors to cast and sell small works as collectors still financially in a position to purchase artwork tended to support recognized sculptors such as Paul Manship. At the same time, the New Deal created opportunities for lesser known sculptors to pursue commissions for federal contracts via anonymous competitions. Contracts to create art for Federal Buildings were being administered by the Department of Treasury's Section of Painting and Sculpture The section had been established in 1934 under Edward Bruce, Director of the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) with a mission to discover new talent and provide work for unemployed artists.[6]

In 1936, Lo Medico was awarded a PWAP contract to execute plaster reliefs for the new Wilmington, North Carolina Post Office. He wrote "I wish to…praise the policy of the Section of Painting and Sculpture in granting freedom and liberal cooperation to the artists in the execution of their work."[7] His seven 4.5-foot-high panels depicting scenes of North Carolina people, commerce, and history were collectively titled "History and Present Day Themes Relating to Wilmington and Its Surroundings".[8] The individual panels are titled Stevedores, Fishing,[9] Cotton Pickers,[10] Chemists, The Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, The Landing of the English on Roanoke Island, and Education.[7] In 1939, Lo Medico executed a PWAP contract of a terracotta Potter[11] to embellish the interior of the Crooksville, Ohio Post Office.[2]

In 1938, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company announced an $8000 prize for a sculptural group on the American Family intending to make it the centerpiece of their exhibit at the upcoming 1939 New York World's Fair. The competition attracted 257 entries and the winning entry was Family Group by Lo Medico.[6] From the insurance company's perspective the 12-ft- high statue symbolized an average American family moving forward in life shielded from unforeseen hazards by insurance.[12] In April 1940, after the Fair had closed, Family Group was exhibited at the Whitney Museum courtesy of Met Life.[13]

Lo Medico designed his first medal in 1946 for the National Sculpture Society (NSS). The medal in honor of American sculptor Herbert Adams (1958 – 1945) was created as an annual memorial (The Herbert Adams Memorial Award) to recognize individuals and organizations that have significantly encouraged and advanced American sculpture.[2] Lo Medico continued to design new medals almost every year thereafter.

He taught at the NY School of Industrial Art,[2] and the National Academy of Design.[5]

In 1956, Lo Medico moved to Tappan, NY and constructed an art studio behind his house on Main St. where he continued to create sculpture and medals. He died at home on November 29, 1985, at age 81. He was survived by his wife Lenora Lisciandra Lo Medico.[2]

In 1993, his widow donated Lo Medico's papers including correspondence about commemorative medals, sculpture competitions, commissions, and financial records to Smithsonian Archives of American Art.[4] Previous to this, in 1967 & 1971 Lo Medico donated photographs of his work to the Special Collections Research Center at Syracuse University Library.[14]

Artistic controversy edit

On June 17, 1942, Lo Medico won a $1,000 first prize in a competition to design a public sculpture with the theme "Wings for Victory – The Spirit of Aviation". The competition was sponsored by Artists for Victory, Inc., a consortium of twenty-three artists' organizations. The idea was to create a temporary outdoor sculpture that would promote patriotism and incentivize the purchase of War Bonds. Lo Medico submitted a one-third scale model of a 24-foot-high weather resistant plaster stature depicting a resolute looking WW II aviator in flight suit pulling on gloves. His entry was the unanimous choice of the eleven jurors from among 149 entries and the full size statue was expected to be displayed in a prominent public location.[15] The suggested location was in front of the NY Public Library at 42nd St. & 5th Ave.[5] Contest results were announced at the Whitney Museum of American Art and Lo Medico's model along with those of the runners-up were placed on display in the museum entrance hall.[16] Newspapers and magazines around the nation publicized the award and published photos of the winning entry.[17]

In August 1942, New York City Mayor, Fiorello La Guardia sent a letter to Artists for Victory. Inc. expressing disapproval of Lo Medico's design.[18] He stated that he would not approve the statue's placement on any city owned property. The mayor was quoted in the press describing the statue as a "piece of second or third-rate art looking for a first-class controversy". Robert Moses, NYC Parks Commissioner concurred and opposed its display in any city park.[19]

Paul Manship, noted sculptor and the Vice-President of Artists for Victory expressed his support for the jury's decision and suggested erecting the stature on private property or in a different city.[20]

In 1980, nearly 40 years later, commenting on this incident, Lo Medico seemed to blame the media for creating the controversy: "I became a mildly notorious subject thanks to the newspapers. …The sculpture was simply a dramatic rendition of a World War II aviator. It was 24-feet-high and, of course, it was going to be placed in one of the most prominent spots in New York City. That was the plan, but Mayor La Guardia, who was then the mayor of New York, for some reason said 'no'. That was it. The newspapers made quite a thing of it. And, of course, artists all over protested the mayor's decision. It was never put in front of the library." At the time of this interview in 1980, the original 8-ft-high competition model of Wings for Victory was on display in Lo Medico's Tappan, NY studio.[5]

Awards and recognition edit

Lo Medico's artwork has been shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Academy of Design,[2] the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery.[23]

Selected works edit

References edit

  1. ^ Thomas LoMedico, accessed December 2011
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Demarest, William "Sculptor of Astronauts Dies at Tappen Home" The Journal News (White Plains, NY), Nov. 30, 1985, page A1.
  3. ^ Thomas LoMedico, from search at Smithsonian American Art Gallery
  4. ^ a b Thomas Gaetano LoMedico papers, ca. 1939-1980 at the Archives of American Art web site.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Hitzig, Michael "Six Decades a Sculptor" The Journal News (White Plains, NY), March 30, 1980, p. 67.
  6. ^ a b c d Howlett, D. Rodger "Thirties Sculpture in the Manship Tradition Reborn in the Eighties" The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Vol. 16, Summer 1990, pgs. 22 - 27.
  7. ^ a b c Davis, Anita Price New Deal Art in North Carolina, The Murals, Sculptures, Reliefs, Paintings, Oils and Frescoes and Their Creators, McFarland & Co., Jefferson, NC, 2009, pgs. 201 – 205.
  8. ^ "New Deal Art In North Carolina". WPAmurals.com. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  9. ^ "Fisherman (sculpture)". Photograph Archives Catalog. Smithsonian American Art Museum SIRIS.
  10. ^ "Cotton (sculpture)". Photograph Archives. Smithsonian Institution.
  11. ^ "Potter at the Wheel (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. SIRIS.
  12. ^ "Exhibit Planned by Metropolitan" Macon Telegraph (Macon GA), December 17, 1938, p. 9.
  13. ^ Exhibition of Sculptures under the Auspices of the National Sculpture Society at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Platin Press, NY, 1940, Entry #70.
  14. ^ Lo Medico, Thomas. "Inventory of Thomas LoMedico Papers at Syracuse University Library".
  15. ^ McCausland, Elizabeth "Sculptors Contribute to War Effort" Springfield Republican (Springfield, Massachusetts), June 28, 1942, p. 6E.
  16. ^ "Lo Medico, Sculptor, Wins 'Wings for Victory' Prize" Springfield Republican (Springfield, Massachusetts), June 21, 1942, p. 6E.
  17. ^ "Prize Designs for Aviation Monument" Springfield Republican (Springfield, Massachusetts), June 28, 1942, p. 6E.
  18. ^ "Mayor Objects to Gift Statue" The New York Times (NY, NY), August 13, 1942, p. 17.
  19. ^ "Controversy Over The 'Wings for Victory'" Springfield Republican (Springfield, Massachusetts), August 27, 1942, p. 11.
  20. ^ "Aviation Sculpture May Go Out Of City" The New York Times (NY, NY), August 14, 1942, p. 14.
  21. ^ "Historic Members". National Sculpture Society.
  22. ^ a b c d Johnson, D. Wayne Who's Who Among American Medallists, Groton, MA, 2015, p. 176-177.
  23. ^ "Collection Databank". Smithsonian.
  24. ^ "Thomas Lo Medico Photo 1938". Archives of American Art. Smithsonian. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  25. ^ "Family Group (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. SIRIS.
  26. ^ "Thomas Lo Medico Medals". Medallic Art Collector. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  27. ^ Alexander, David Thomason American Art Medals, 1909 – 1995, The American Numismatic Society, New York, NY, 2010, p. 122.
  28. ^ "Six Early Saints (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. SIRIS.
  29. ^ "Popular Mechanics 10th Anniversary". Art Inventories Catalogue. Smithsonian American Art Museum.
  30. ^ Johnson, Dick. "Record for Thomas Gaetano LoMEDICO". Dick Johnson's Databank of Medallic Artists.
  31. ^ "Medal for the World Council of Churches Assembly" The Circleville Herald (Circleville, OH), Aug 28, 1954. p. 3.
  32. ^ "Official Seal of the City of Rye". Art Inventories Catalog. SIRIS.
  33. ^ "Alice Palmer Medal". Mantis. American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  34. ^ "Students (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  35. ^ "Paul Revere". Mantis. American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  36. ^ "Patrick Henry". Mantis. American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  37. ^ "Jean Pointe du Sable". Mantis. American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  38. ^ "NSS 75th Anniversary". Mantis. American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  39. ^ Reuters, "Astronaut Medal Has a Goof-up" Omaha World News (Omaha NE), Jul 16, 1970, p. 28.

External links edit

  • Smithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery Biography of Thomas Lo Medico
  • Medallic Art Collector Biography of Thomas Lo Medico

thomas, gaetano, lomedico, july, 1904, november, 1985, american, sculptor, medalist, born, raised, york, city, sculpture, awards, 1930s, 1940s, several, american, museum, collections, born, 1904, july, 1904, york, citydiednovember, 1985, 1985, aged, tappan, yo. Thomas Gaetano LoMedico July 11 1904 November 29 1985 was an American sculptor and medalist 4 Born and raised in New York City his sculpture won awards in the 1930s and 1940s and is now in several American museum collections Thomas Gaetano LoMedicoBorn 1904 07 11 July 11 1904 1 New York CityDiedNovember 29 1985 1985 11 30 aged 81 2 Tappan New York 3 NationalityAmericanEducationBeaux Arts Institute of DesignKnown forSculpture Art MedalsSpouseLeonora Lisciandra LoMedicoAwardsSaltus Award Contents 1 Life and career 2 Artistic controversy 3 Awards and recognition 4 Selected works 5 References 6 External linksLife and career editThomas Lo Medico was born in Upper East Side Manhattan on July 11 1904 the son of Philip and Angelina Cimino Lo Medico 2 His interest in the arts surfaced at a young age and while at PS 13 Manhattan he designed posters for neighborhood storefronts to promote the sale of WW I Liberty Bonds 5 In 1920 at age 16 he was hired as an artist s apprentice in a New York architectural sculpture studio In the evenings from 1920 thru 1928 he studied at the Beaux Arts Institute of Design 2 Chartered in 1916 the Beaux Arts Institute had as its mission promotion of the Beaux Arts architectural style and fostering of closer relationships between architects muralists and sculptors 6 In 1935 after fifteen years creating architectural sculpture Lo Medico opened his own studio in New York City The Great Depression made it difficult for young sculptors to cast and sell small works as collectors still financially in a position to purchase artwork tended to support recognized sculptors such as Paul Manship At the same time the New Deal created opportunities for lesser known sculptors to pursue commissions for federal contracts via anonymous competitions Contracts to create art for Federal Buildings were being administered by the Department of Treasury s Section of Painting and Sculpture The section had been established in 1934 under Edward Bruce Director of the Public Works of Art Project PWAP with a mission to discover new talent and provide work for unemployed artists 6 In 1936 Lo Medico was awarded a PWAP contract to execute plaster reliefs for the new Wilmington North Carolina Post Office He wrote I wish to praise the policy of the Section of Painting and Sculpture in granting freedom and liberal cooperation to the artists in the execution of their work 7 His seven 4 5 foot high panels depicting scenes of North Carolina people commerce and history were collectively titled History and Present Day Themes Relating to Wilmington and Its Surroundings 8 The individual panels are titled Stevedores Fishing 9 Cotton Pickers 10 Chemists The Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence The Landing of the English on Roanoke Island and Education 7 In 1939 Lo Medico executed a PWAP contract of a terracotta Potter 11 to embellish the interior of the Crooksville Ohio Post Office 2 In 1938 the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company announced an 8000 prize for a sculptural group on the American Family intending to make it the centerpiece of their exhibit at the upcoming 1939 New York World s Fair The competition attracted 257 entries and the winning entry was Family Group by Lo Medico 6 From the insurance company s perspective the 12 ft high statue symbolized an average American family moving forward in life shielded from unforeseen hazards by insurance 12 In April 1940 after the Fair had closed Family Group was exhibited at the Whitney Museum courtesy of Met Life 13 Lo Medico designed his first medal in 1946 for the National Sculpture Society NSS The medal in honor of American sculptor Herbert Adams 1958 1945 was created as an annual memorial The Herbert Adams Memorial Award to recognize individuals and organizations that have significantly encouraged and advanced American sculpture 2 Lo Medico continued to design new medals almost every year thereafter He taught at the NY School of Industrial Art 2 and the National Academy of Design 5 In 1956 Lo Medico moved to Tappan NY and constructed an art studio behind his house on Main St where he continued to create sculpture and medals He died at home on November 29 1985 at age 81 He was survived by his wife Lenora Lisciandra Lo Medico 2 In 1993 his widow donated Lo Medico s papers including correspondence about commemorative medals sculpture competitions commissions and financial records to Smithsonian Archives of American Art 4 Previous to this in 1967 amp 1971 Lo Medico donated photographs of his work to the Special Collections Research Center at Syracuse University Library 14 Artistic controversy editOn June 17 1942 Lo Medico won a 1 000 first prize in a competition to design a public sculpture with the theme Wings for Victory The Spirit of Aviation The competition was sponsored by Artists for Victory Inc a consortium of twenty three artists organizations The idea was to create a temporary outdoor sculpture that would promote patriotism and incentivize the purchase of War Bonds Lo Medico submitted a one third scale model of a 24 foot high weather resistant plaster stature depicting a resolute looking WW II aviator in flight suit pulling on gloves His entry was the unanimous choice of the eleven jurors from among 149 entries and the full size statue was expected to be displayed in a prominent public location 15 The suggested location was in front of the NY Public Library at 42nd St amp 5th Ave 5 Contest results were announced at the Whitney Museum of American Art and Lo Medico s model along with those of the runners up were placed on display in the museum entrance hall 16 Newspapers and magazines around the nation publicized the award and published photos of the winning entry 17 In August 1942 New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia sent a letter to Artists for Victory Inc expressing disapproval of Lo Medico s design 18 He stated that he would not approve the statue s placement on any city owned property The mayor was quoted in the press describing the statue as a piece of second or third rate art looking for a first class controversy Robert Moses NYC Parks Commissioner concurred and opposed its display in any city park 19 Paul Manship noted sculptor and the Vice President of Artists for Victory expressed his support for the jury s decision and suggested erecting the stature on private property or in a different city 20 In 1980 nearly 40 years later commenting on this incident Lo Medico seemed to blame the media for creating the controversy I became a mildly notorious subject thanks to the newspapers The sculpture was simply a dramatic rendition of a World War II aviator It was 24 feet high and of course it was going to be placed in one of the most prominent spots in New York City That was the plan but Mayor La Guardia who was then the mayor of New York for some reason said no That was it The newspapers made quite a thing of it And of course artists all over protested the mayor s decision It was never put in front of the library At the time of this interview in 1980 the original 8 ft high competition model of Wings for Victory was on display in Lo Medico s Tappan NY studio 5 Awards and recognition edit 1938 Elected Fellow of the National Sculpture Society 21 1956 J Sanford Saltus Award for his Medallic Art form the American Numismatic Society 22 1952 National Sculpture Society Lindsey Morris Prize for best bas relief 22 Member of the National Academy of Design 22 Member of Allied Artists of America 2 Recognized by and member of the Architectural League of New York 2 Lo Medico s artwork has been shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York the Whitney Museum of American Art the National Academy of Design 2 the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Smithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery 23 Selected works edit 1936 Seven Reliefs for the New Wilmington North Carolina Post Office 7 1937 Mother and Child The Immigrant sculpture 24 1938 Family Group sculpture for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company 25 exhibit at the 1939 New York World s Fair 6 1939 Potter for Crooksville Ohio Post Office 2 1946 Herbert Adams Memorial Annual Award Medal for the National Sculpture Society Lo Medico s design won a design competition for creation of this medal 26 1948 Society of Medalists 38th Issue medal Pursuit of Happiness 27 1955 59 Statues 28 of St John Chrysostom St Ignatius St Justin St Leo St Jerome and St Augustine for the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington D C 5 1952 Popular Mechanics Hall of Fame Tenth Anniversary bronze plaque 29 1953 University of Puerto Rico 50th Anniversary Medal 30 1954 World Council of Churches 2nd Assembly Medal presented to attendees at the August 1954 Conference in Evanston Illinois 31 1958 American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Recognition Medal 22 1963 City of Rye NY Official Seal 32 for the exterior of the new City Hall 5 1964 Medallic Art Co Hall of Fame for Great Americans Series Alice Freeman Palmer Medal 33 1964 Students anodized bronze relief for Junior High School No 7 Staten Island NY 34 1965 National Commemorative Society Paul Revere Medal 35 1966 Medallic Art Co Hall of Fame for Great Americans Series Patrick Henry Medal 36 1968 American Negro Commemorative Society Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable Medal 37 1968 National Sculpture Society 75th Anniversary Medal 38 1970 Texas Astronauts Medal of Valor 5 commissioned by the State of Texas 39 and presented to Neil A Armstrong Edwin E Aldrin Jr and Michael Collins in recognition of the first Moon landing 2 References edit Thomas LoMedico accessed December 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l Demarest William Sculptor of Astronauts Dies at Tappen Home The Journal News White Plains NY Nov 30 1985 page A1 Thomas LoMedico from search at Smithsonian American Art Gallery a b Thomas Gaetano LoMedico papers ca 1939 1980 at the Archives of American Art web site a b c d e f g Hitzig Michael Six Decades a Sculptor The Journal News White Plains NY March 30 1980 p 67 a b c d Howlett D Rodger Thirties Sculpture in the Manship Tradition Reborn in the Eighties The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts Vol 16 Summer 1990 pgs 22 27 a b c Davis Anita Price New Deal Art in North Carolina The Murals Sculptures Reliefs Paintings Oils and Frescoes and Their Creators McFarland amp Co Jefferson NC 2009 pgs 201 205 New Deal Art In North Carolina WPAmurals com Retrieved 30 May 2016 Fisherman sculpture Photograph Archives Catalog Smithsonian American Art Museum SIRIS Cotton sculpture Photograph Archives Smithsonian Institution Potter at the Wheel sculpture Art Inventories Catalog SIRIS Exhibit Planned by Metropolitan Macon Telegraph Macon GA December 17 1938 p 9 Exhibition of Sculptures under the Auspices of the National Sculpture Society at the Whitney Museum of American Art Platin Press NY 1940 Entry 70 Lo Medico Thomas Inventory of Thomas LoMedico Papers at Syracuse University Library McCausland Elizabeth Sculptors Contribute to War Effort Springfield Republican Springfield Massachusetts June 28 1942 p 6E Lo Medico Sculptor Wins Wings for Victory Prize Springfield Republican Springfield Massachusetts June 21 1942 p 6E Prize Designs for Aviation Monument Springfield Republican Springfield Massachusetts June 28 1942 p 6E Mayor Objects to Gift Statue The New York Times NY NY August 13 1942 p 17 Controversy Over The Wings for Victory Springfield Republican Springfield Massachusetts August 27 1942 p 11 Aviation Sculpture May Go Out Of City The New York Times NY NY August 14 1942 p 14 Historic Members National Sculpture Society a b c d Johnson D Wayne Who s Who Among American Medallists Groton MA 2015 p 176 177 Collection Databank Smithsonian Thomas Lo Medico Photo 1938 Archives of American Art Smithsonian Retrieved 30 May 2016 Family Group sculpture Art Inventories Catalog SIRIS Thomas Lo Medico Medals Medallic Art Collector Retrieved 30 May 2016 Alexander David Thomason American Art Medals 1909 1995 The American Numismatic Society New York NY 2010 p 122 Six Early Saints sculpture Art Inventories Catalog SIRIS Popular Mechanics 10th Anniversary Art Inventories Catalogue Smithsonian American Art Museum Johnson Dick Record for Thomas Gaetano LoMEDICO Dick Johnson s Databank of Medallic Artists Medal for the World Council of Churches Assembly The Circleville Herald Circleville OH Aug 28 1954 p 3 Official Seal of the City of Rye Art Inventories Catalog SIRIS Alice Palmer Medal Mantis American Numismatic Society Retrieved 30 May 2016 Students sculpture Art Inventories Catalog Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 30 May 2016 Paul Revere Mantis American Numismatic Society Retrieved 30 May 2016 Patrick Henry Mantis American Numismatic Society Retrieved 30 May 2016 Jean Pointe du Sable Mantis American Numismatic Society Retrieved 30 May 2016 NSS 75th Anniversary Mantis American Numismatic Society Retrieved 30 May 2016 Reuters Astronaut Medal Has a Goof up Omaha World News Omaha NE Jul 16 1970 p 28 External links editSmithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery Biography of Thomas Lo Medico Medallic Art Collector Biography of Thomas Lo Medico Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Gaetano LoMedico amp oldid 1187590345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.