"I SUPPOSE I SHALL BE IMPEACHED FOR IT..." Public Deposited

ANS OPENS SAINT-GAUDENS EXHIBIT

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 35, September 3, 2007, Article 5

    ANS OPENS SAINT-GAUDENS EXHIBIT: “I SUPPOSE I SHALL BE IMPEACHED FOR IT…”

    According to a press release issued August 24, "The American
    Numismatic Society, in conjunction with the Saint-Gaudens
    National Historic Site and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
    takes great pleasure in announcing the opening of an important
    and unprecedented new exhibition: “I suppose I shall be impeached
    for it…” Theodore Roosevelt, Augustus Saint-Gaudens and America’s
    Most Beautiful Coin. This exhibit, held at the Federal Reserve
    Bank of New York at 33 Liberty St., will be on view from
    September 20, 2007 through March 31, 2008.

    "2007 marks not only the centenary year of both the death of
    Augustus Saint-Gaudens, America’s greatest sculptor of the late
    19th and early 20th centuries, but also the release of his
    revolutionary and controversial designs for the twenty- and
    ten-dollar gold pieces. Today these are hailed as the most
    beautiful coins ever produced by the United States. At a White
    House diplomatic supper in January 1905, President Theodore
    Roosevelt approached Augustus Saint-Gaudens with his hopes to
    improve upon the “atrocious hideousness” of America’s coins.
    Although the artist was reluctant to agree to the President’s
    wishes due to ill health and prior unpleasant experiences
    with the United States Mint, Saint-Gaudens took on the task.
    This partnership of artist and president to create new
    designs for coinage remains unparalleled in American history.

    "Saint-Gaudens approached the commission as he did any other,
    making rapid-fire pencil sketches and rough clay models cast
    in plaster. Guiding the younger and steadier hands of his chief
    assistant, Henry Hering, the designs metamorphosed from concept
    to reality. It was an arduous process which saw Saint-Gaudens
    fine tuning the design elements as he met resistance every step
    of the way from the United States Mint - most particularly from
    its contentious and intensely jealous chief engraver, Charles
    Barber.

    "In February 1907, Saint-Gaudens held the first examples of
    his concept struck in gold. More than mere coins, they were
    fully realized sculptures on a miniature scale. The President
    was overjoyed, but the high-relief of the coins rendered them
    useless for everyday commerce. For the next half year (the last
    few months of his life) Saint-Gaudens worked with his assistant
    in an effort to retain the coin’s majesty while making it
    suitable for the rigors of circulation.

    "At the time of Saint-Gaudens’s death in August 1907 the job
    was not yet done, but Roosevelt kept the flame alive, insisting
    that a second mintage of reduced high-relief “double eagles” be
    struck. Although approximately 12,000 of these were made, they
    too failed the test and ultimately Charles Barber’s flattened
    relief prevailed.

    "The exhibition at the New York Federal Reserve Bank will, for
    the first time, draw together elements of all phases of this
    remarkable partnership and commission. The collections of the
    Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site and the American Numismatic
    Society contain an incomparable array of material charting
    virtually all phases of the commission as well as Saint-Gaudens’
    career as a cameo-cutter, sculptor and medalist.

    "Examples of early cameos will be displayed along with some of
    the classical numismatic prototypes that Saint-Gaudens is known
    to have used as inspiration. Examples of his medallic work
    ranging from private commissions for friends to the 1889 Washington
    Inaugural Centennial to examples of the Columbian Exposition
    Award medal will be included.

    "The centerpiece of the exhibition will be the progression of
    the design process for the new coinage and will concentrate on
    the “double eagle”. Correspondence with the president, examples
    of Saint-Gaudens’ original pencil sketches, plaster models, and
    the massive 12-inch plaster of the famed Ultra High Relief will
    be on view. Included will be the series of electrotypes for
    the ultra high relief coin, showing the progression of the
    multiple strikes needed to fully bring up the detail.

    "Augustus Saint-Gaudens quite literally gave some of his
    very last thoughts to bettering his fellow Americans’ coinage.
    The depth of his impact can be still be felt in our pockets
    today, for the inventiveness and artistic integrity that Saint-
    Gaudens brought to American coin design was continued by his
    students’ work: James Earle Fraser’s buffalo nickel, Adolf
    Weinman’s mercury dime and walking Liberty half dollar, and
    finally James Flanagan’s Washington quarter which is still
    circulating today.

    “I suppose I shall be impeached for it…” Theodore Roosevelt,
    Augustus Saint-Gaudens and America’s Most Beautiful Coin will
    be on view at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York at 33 Liberty
    Street, New York, NY from September 20, 2007 through March 31,
    2008. Exhibition hours are 10:00am to 4:00pm Monday through
    Friday. Those interested in attending the press preview on
    September 19, 2007 should contact Megan Fenselau of the
    American Numismatic Society at (212) 571-4470 ext. 1311 or
    fenselau@numismatics.org."

Source URL Date published
  • 2007-09-03
Volume
  • 10

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