Hoffman, Malvina

Hoffman, Malvina

▪ American sculptor
born June 15, 1887, New York, N.Y., U.S.
died July 10, 1966, New York City

      American sculptor, remembered for her portraiture and for her unique sculptural contribution to Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History.

      Hoffman was the daughter of a noted English pianist. She leaned strongly toward an artistic career from an early age, and after studying painting for several years she took up sculpture, studying with Gutzon Borglum (Borglum, Gutzon), who is perhaps best known for the Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota. She went to Paris in 1910 and studied in the studio of Auguste Rodin (Rodin, Auguste). Her Russian Dancers won first prize in an international art exposition in that year. She opened a studio of her own in New York City in 1912, but from 1913 to 1915 she was again in Paris. In the latter year her Pavlowa Gavotte and Bacchanale Russe won wide attention.

      During World War I Hoffman was active in Red Cross work and was the American representative for Appui aux Artistes, an organization for the relief of needy artists that she had helped found in France. After the war she was deeply involved in relief work and conducted a tour of inspection of the Balkan countries for Herbert Hoover in 1919. Her first major postwar sculpture was The Sacrifice, a war memorial for Harvard University. A massive group, To the Friendship of the English Speaking People, was dedicated at Bush House in London in 1925. She became especially known for her portrait sculptures, and among her subjects were pianist Ignacy Paderewski (several times), ballerina Anna Pavlova (several times), conservationist John Muir, poet John Keats, and sculptor Ivan Mestrovic.

      Hoffman's skilled, finely detailed portraits brought her in 1930 a remarkable commission from the Field Museum of Natural History to execute a series of 110 life-size figures (25 full-figure, 85 in bust) of human racial types. For five years she alternated periods in her Paris studio with journeys to every portion of the globe, often under considerable hardship, to observe and model the various types called for in the plan. (She had already spent 1926–27 in Africa for a similar purpose.) Leading anthropologists were consulted along the way. Of the 110 figures finally completed for the Hall of Man (which was dedicated in June 1933, before completion), 97 were cast by her in bronze, the remaining 13 being done in marble or stone.

      Hoffman's other notable sculptures include a series of 26 stone panels for the facade of the Joslin Clinic in Boston, the American Battle Monument (World War II) at Épinal, France, and a bronze Mongolian Archer, which won a gold medal from the Allied Artists of America in 1962. In 1936 she published a memoir, Heads and Tales, and in 1939 Sculpture Inside and Out.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Hoffman,Malvina — Hoff·man (hôfʹmən), Malvina. 1887 1966. American sculptor who created 110 figures of ethnic types for the Field Museum in Chicago (1930 1933). * * * …   Universalium

  • Malvina Hoffman — Malvina Hoffman, c. 1920 Malvina Hoffman (June 15, 1885 [1] [2] [3] , sometimes given as 1887 …   Wikipedia

  • Malvina Hoffman — Malvina Hoffman. Malvina Hoffman (Ciudad de Nueva York, 15 de junio de 1887 – 10 de julio de 1966), fue una escultora estadounidense, famosa por sus esculturas de tamaño natural Malvina Hoffman era la hija del pianista de conciertos Richard… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Malvina — Gender feminine Other names Related names Malwine, Malvine, Malwida, Malve, Mal, Malvin Malvina is a female given name that has many variants such as Malvine, Malwine, Malwina, Malwida, Malve, and Mal. Etymology The name Malvina comes from Celtic …   Wikipedia

  • Malvina — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Malvina est un prénom féminin anglo saxon inventé au XVIIIe siècle par le poète écossais James Macpherson, qui aurait formé « Malvina » à l …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hoffman — Hoffmann and Hofmann are German surnames (meaning man of the yard, court ) which in American English or Eastern European languages are often rendered as Hoffman, Hofman and also Huffman.Hoffman*Abbie Hoffman, social activist of prominence in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Hoffman — Hoffmann y Hofmann son apellidos alemanes (que significan hombre del patio o de la granja) que en inglés estadounidense o idiomas de Europa del Este son a menudo presentados como Hoffman, Hofman y también Huffman. Contenido 1 Hoffman 2 Hoffmann 3 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Hoffman — /hof meuhn/, n. Malvina /mal vee neuh/, 1887 1966, U.S. sculptor. * * * (as used in expressions) Hoffman Abbie Abbott Hoffman Hoffman Dustin Hoffman Samuel Kurtz * * * …   Universalium

  • Hoffman — noun 1. United States sculptor (1887 1966) • Syn: ↑Malvina Hoffman • Instance Hypernyms: ↑sculptor, ↑sculpturer, ↑carver, ↑statue maker 2. versatile United States film actor (born in 1937) …   Useful english dictionary

  • Malvina Hoffman — noun United States sculptor (1887 1966) • Syn: ↑Hoffman • Instance Hypernyms: ↑sculptor, ↑sculpturer, ↑carver, ↑statue maker …   Useful english dictionary

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