Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Thomas Ridgeway Gould was an American sculptor active in Boston and Florence. Gould was born in Boston. He was at first a merchant with his brother in the dry-goods business, but studied sculpture under Seth Wells Cheney starting in 1851 and in 1863 exhibited two large heads of Christ and Satan at the Boston Athenaeum. As a result of the American Civil War, he lost his moderate fortune and in 1868 moved with his family to Florence, Italy, where he devoted himself to study and work. His West Wind, originally sculpted in 1870, stirred controversy in 1874 when it was denounced as a copy of Canova's Hebe, except the drapery, which was modeled by Signor Mazzoli. Newspaper correspondence followed this charge and it was proved groundless. Gould declared that his designs were entirely his own and that not a statue, bust or medallion was allowed to leave his studio until finished in all points on which depended their character and expression. West Wind was later shown in the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876 and Gould subsequently made seven copies in two sizes. He also created statues of Kamehameha the Great, Cleopatra, Timon of Athens, Ariel and John Hancock, which is now in the town hall of Lexington, Massachusetts. Gould visited Boston in 1878, where he executed several portrait busts, including those of Emerson, now in the Harvard University library, John Albion Andrew, Seth Wells Cheney and Junius Brutus Booth. Two alti rilievi representing Steam and Electricity, displayed within the Boston Herald building, were among his last works. His statue of John Bridge, now in Cambridge, was completed by his son. Gould died in Florence, Italy on November 26, 1881. His body was returned to Forest Hills Cemetery for burial in the family plot, where it is commemorated with one of his creations, Ascending Spirit.
19th Century Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
Early 20th Century Art Deco Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
1990s Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble, Bronze
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
Late 20th Century American Modern Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
18th Century Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble, Bronze
1850s Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble, Iron
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
20th Century Expressionist Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble, Bronze
2010s Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
1850s Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble
Late 19th Century Thomas Ridgeway Gould Art
Marble, Bronze