Frances Laughlin Wadsworth
Frances Laughlin Wadsworth (1909-1978) was an American sculptor active in Hartford, Connecticut.
Wadsworth graduated from St. Catherine's School (Richmond, Virginia) in 1927, from which she received the Distinguished Alumna Award in 1970. She served as Fine Art Instructor at the Institute of Living in Hartford.
Selected works
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frances Laughlin Wadsworth. |
- Thomas Hooker statue, 1938
- Brother and Sister, Institute of Living, Hartford, 1949
- Thomas Hooker statue, Hartford, 1950
- Alice Cogswell statue (American School for the Deaf Founders Memorial), Hartford, 1952
- The Safe Arrival, Hartford, 1964
- The Young President, 1964
- Day Dreams, date unknown
- Love, date unknown
- "The peer status of sixth and seventh grade children", New York, Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1954.
- Robert Kennedy, 1966
References
- Doris Estelle Cook, Hartford's Most Visible Sculptor: Frances L. Wadsworth, Connecticut Historical Society, 1988.
- Institute of Living, Annual Report, 1950.
- Smithsonian Institution: Siris art database
- St. Catherine's School: Distinguished Alumna Award
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.