Frederick Ruckstull: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Ruckstuhl Evening Back.jpg|thumb|right|190px|''Evening'' (1891), in the collection of the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]]]
[[File:Ruckstuhl Evening Back.jpg|thumb|right|190px|''Evening'' (1891), in the collection of the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]]]


Born ''Ruckstuhl'' in [[Breitenbach-Haut-Rhin|Breitenbach]], [[Alsace]], France, his family moved to [[St. Louis, Missouri]],<ref name="Ruckstull1925">{{cite book|last=Ruckstull|first=F. W.|title=Great Works of Art and what Makes Them Great: 175 Illustrations, p. 517|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j0FkuAAACAAJ|accessdate=16 August 2012|year=1925|publisher=Garden City Publ.|isbn=0-7661-7108-6}}</ref> in 1855. He worked at a variety of unsatisfying jobs until his early twenties when an art exhibition in St. Louis inspired him to become a sculptor. He studied art locally, visited [[Paris]] and then worked for years as a toy store clerk to save enough to study in Paris for three years. In 1885, Ruckstull entered the [[Académie Julian]], and studied under [[Gustave Boulanger]], [[Camille Lefèvre]], [[Jean Dampt]] and [[Antonin Mercié]]. He considered studying with [[Auguste Rodin]], but claimed to be disgusted with his style.
Born ''Ruckstuhl'' in [[Breitenbach, Bas-Rhin|Breitenbach]], [[Alsace]], France, his family moved to [[St. Louis, Missouri]],<ref name="Ruckstull1925">{{cite book|last=Ruckstull|first=F. W.|title=Great Works of Art and what Makes Them Great: 175 Illustrations, p. 517|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j0FkuAAACAAJ|accessdate=16 August 2012|year=1925|publisher=Garden City Publ.|isbn=0-7661-7108-6}}</ref> in 1855. He worked at a variety of unsatisfying jobs until his early twenties when an art exhibition in St. Louis inspired him to become a sculptor. He studied art locally, visited [[Paris]] and then worked for years as a toy store clerk to save enough to study in Paris for three years. In 1885, Ruckstull entered the [[Académie Julian]], and studied under [[Gustave Boulanger]], [[Camille Lefèvre]], [[Jean Dampt]] and [[Antonin Mercié]]. He considered studying with [[Auguste Rodin]], but claimed to be disgusted with his style.


On returning to U.S. in 1892, Ruckstull opened a studio in [[New York City]]. His work ''Evening'' won the grand medal for sculpture at the 1893 [[World's Columbian Exposition]]. As a result of this national exposure, he was commissioned to make an equestrian statue of Major-General [[John F. Hartranft]] for the [[Pennsylvania State University]]. In 1893, Ruckstull was appointed to teach modeling and marble carving at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art Schools]] in New York City.<ref>[http://libmma.org/digital_files/archives/Schools_Records_b18062179.pdf Finding aid for Schools of The Metropolitan Museum of Art Records (1879–1895)]. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 31 July 2014.</ref>
On returning to U.S. in 1892, Ruckstull opened a studio in [[New York City]]. His work ''Evening'' won the grand medal for sculpture at the 1893 [[World's Columbian Exposition]]. As a result of this national exposure, he was commissioned to make an equestrian statue of Major-General [[John F. Hartranft]] for the [[Pennsylvania State University]]. In 1893, Ruckstull was appointed to teach modeling and marble carving at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art Schools]] in New York City.<ref>[http://libmma.org/digital_files/archives/Schools_Records_b18062179.pdf Finding aid for Schools of The Metropolitan Museum of Art Records (1879–1895)]. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 31 July 2014.</ref>

Latest revision as of 10:28, 29 June 2025

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Frederick Wellington Ruckstull (German: Friedrich Ruckstuhl; May 22, 1853 – May 26, 1942) was a French-born American sculptor and art critic.

Life and career

File:Ruckstuhl Evening Back.jpg
Evening (1891), in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Born Ruckstuhl in Breitenbach, Alsace, France, his family moved to St. Louis, Missouri,[1] in 1855. He worked at a variety of unsatisfying jobs until his early twenties when an art exhibition in St. Louis inspired him to become a sculptor. He studied art locally, visited Paris and then worked for years as a toy store clerk to save enough to study in Paris for three years. In 1885, Ruckstull entered the Académie Julian, and studied under Gustave Boulanger, Camille Lefèvre, Jean Dampt and Antonin Mercié. He considered studying with Auguste Rodin, but claimed to be disgusted with his style.

On returning to U.S. in 1892, Ruckstull opened a studio in New York City. His work Evening won the grand medal for sculpture at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. As a result of this national exposure, he was commissioned to make an equestrian statue of Major-General John F. Hartranft for the Pennsylvania State University. In 1893, Ruckstull was appointed to teach modeling and marble carving at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Schools in New York City.[2]

He was also deeply involved with creating Confederate memorial sculpture, forging a sculptural iconography for the Southern ideology of the Lost Cause.[3]

Ruckstull was a founding member of the National Sculpture Society as well as the editor of the conservative magazine Art World, where he wrote under the pseudonym Petronius Arbiter, a reference to the Satyricon. In the spring of 1917, he wrote a manifesto inveighing against degenerate modernist art, where he attacked both the artworks and the artists, using racist tropes and the quasi-medical language of physiognomy to attack them.[3]

In 1925 he wrote the book Great Works of Art and What Makes Them Great, a collection of essays he had published previously, which has recently been reprinted. His sculpture was in the figurative Beaux-Arts style, with its realism, and detailed modeling. He and other prominent sculptors of the era such as Daniel Chester French championed the French style of studio system teaching, art societies, and exhibitions. Following the Armory Show of 1913, he continued to represent the old guard of academic sculpture, a perspective clearly expressed in his book.

Ruckstull married in 1896 and had one son. He died at his home in New York on May 26, 1942, four days after his 89th birthday, and was cremated.[4]

Works

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References

Notes

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  2. Finding aid for Schools of The Metropolitan Museum of Art Records (1879–1895). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
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External links

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