Lewis, Edmonia

Lewis, Edmonia

▪ American sculptor
in full  Mary Edmonia Lewis 
born July 4, 1845, Greenbush, New York, U.S.
died after 1909

      American sculptor whose Neoclassical works exploring religious and classical themes won contemporary praise and received renewed interest in the late 20th century.

      Lewis was the daughter of an African American man and a woman of African and Ojibwa (Chippewa) descent. By age four she was an orphan. She then lived with her maternal aunts among the Ojibwa, who called her Wildfire. With the help of an older brother, she obtained admission to the preparatory department of Oberlin College in 1859, and from 1860 to 1862 she attended the college proper.

      Lewis thrived at Oberlin, excelling particularly at drawing, but she left in 1863 after having been accused both of theft and of poisoning two of her classmates. A mob beat her severely before her trial for accusations of poisoning; she was later acquitted, with the help of lawyer John Mercer Langston (Langston, John Mercer). Again with her brother's support, she made her way to Boston, where abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison (Garrison, William Lloyd) introduced her to a local sculptor from whom she received a few lessons in modeling.

      Lewis's first work seen publicly was a medallion, advertised for sale early in 1864, that featured the head of militant abolitionist John Brown (Brown, John). Later in the year her bust of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw (a Boston hero who had been killed leading his black troops in the attack on Fort Wagner, part of the assault on Charleston, South Carolina) was widely praised. Sales of copies of the bust allowed her to sail in 1865 to Rome, where Charlotte Cushman (Cushman, Charlotte Saunders), Harriet Hosmer (Hosmer, Harriet Goodhue), and other members of the American art community took her under their wing. Lewis mastered working in marble and refused to hire Italian stone carvers to transfer her plaster models to marble, in order to quell any question that the work was her own.

      Lewis quickly achieved success as a sculptor. Inspired by the Emancipation Proclamation, she carved The Freed Woman and Her Child (1866) and Forever Free (1867). She subsequently turned to Native American themes and created The Marriage of Hiawatha (c. 1868) and The Old Arrow Maker and His Daughter (1872), both based on the narrative poem The Song of Hiawatha (1855) by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, of whom she carved a bust (c. 1869). Her other notable works included busts of Garrison (c. 1866), Abraham Lincoln (1873), John Brown (1864–65), and Hygeia (c. 1876), a grave statue that was commissioned by Harriot K. Hunt (Hunt, Harriot Kezia).

 Lewis also depicted biblical figures, such as Hagar (1875). Her career reached its peak in 1876 when her sculpture The Death of Cleopatra was exhibited at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition. In 1883 she received her last major commission, a version of the Adoration of the Magi, from a church in Baltimore, Maryland. This piece, like the bulk of her work, cannot be located and perhaps did not survive. It was variously reported that Lewis had been last seen in Rome in 1909 or 1911, but the circumstances of her death are uncertain.
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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