The Head Librarian at Boston Public Library said,
"The Bacchante and Infant Faun may have been banned in Boston and the original sent to New York City Metropolitan Museum decades ago but not the Boston Monument Guide Book to Monuments and sculptures called;"Boston Bronze and Stone Speak To Us".
Map of Copley Square Boston, MA |
Author Joe Gallo BPL Courtyard |
Bacchante and Infant Faun Sculpture Boston, MA |
Bacchante and Infant Faun
Boston Public Library Frederick W. MacMonnies, Sculptor Bronze
“Banned in Boston, 1896,” the Boston Globe states.
This delightful light-hearted bronze piece was a gift from architect Charles Follen McKim, the designer of the original Boston Public Library. The statue depicts a nude woman holding an infant. The Boston Globe suggested that it be replaced by a “nice moral statue of a Sunday school teacher”. Further comments from a local minister called it “a memorial to the worst type of harlotry with which the world was ever afflicted.” McKim decided to remove it from the courtyard fountain and donate it to the New York Metropolitan Museum. The MET gladly accepted.
Several years later, George Robert White, a Boston philanthropist, obtained a second “Bacchante and Infant Faun” casting and offered it to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts which they gladly accepted as well. Boston Public Library Court Yard still has the copy and not the original gifted piece to this day.
Although not an original, “Bacchante and Infant Faun” defiantly and playfully dance on the fountain’s waters, meant to be an oasis for hard working academics everywhere and in every field of study.
"Boston Bronze and Stone Speak To Us"can be purchased on Amazon.com and sold in local Boston Book stores.
Dear Mister Gallo, Hello from the Newman School in Back Bay. I would like to talk with you to see if you would be willing and able to open our exhibition for National History Day. It would mean giving a 15 minute address starting at 3:30 on Wednesday, February 8. This year's theme for National History Day is 'Taking A Stand In History'. My telephone number is 857 272 0940
ReplyDeleteThank you,
Arthur Busch