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Edith Barretto Stevens Parsons
American sculptor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Edith Barretto Stevens Parsons (1878 Halifax, Virginia – 1956 New Canaan, Connecticut) was an American sculptor.[1]
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Life
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Edith studied with Daniel Chester French, and at the Art Students League of New York, where she won a sculpture prize and scholarships. She apprenticed with James Earle Fraser.[1]
She sculpted figures for the 1902 St. Louis Exposition's Liberal Arts Building, and in 1908 showed her sculpture Earth Mother at the National Academy of Design. That same year, she married[1] and built a studio on the top floor of their home.
Her work changed its subject matter as her own children were born and posed for her sculptures, often holding ducks, turtles, and other creatures. Duck Baby, beginning a series of garden sculptures for which she is best known today, was the popular hit of the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition. The exposition handbook stated: "In the presence of so much that is weighty and powerful, the popularity of Duck Baby is a significant and touching indication of the world's hunger for what is cheerful and mirth-provoking."[2] The same may be said of Turtle Baby and Frog Baby, which forms the centerpiece of the small works collection at Brookgreen Gardens, South Carolina.
Parsons also created portrait busts and public monuments including a World War I memorial in Summit, New Jersey, and a fountain dedicated to John Galloway in Memphis, Tennessee.[2]
A quote that appeared in an anonymous newspaper article in the 1920s praised her work.
Though intensely reticent about herself one may, if privileged to enter that home, breathe there the spirit of the gifted woman who has been able to imprison in bronze the smile of a little child.[1]
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Personal life
She married Howard Crosby Parsons in 1908. He was a direct descendant of Charles Willson Peale and they had one child, Edith Gilman Parsons.
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