
History of The Statue of Liberty
A journey to Egypt
and Yemen in 1855 and 1886, in the company of Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904)
and other orientalist painters, fueled Bartholdi's fascination with
colossal sculpture. He returned to Egypt in 1869 with a proposal to create
a lighthouse--in the form of a gigantic draped figure holding a torch--at
the entrance to the newly completed Suez Canal. The commission never came,
but his plan found a new form later in the Statue of Liberty.
Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
French, 1834 - 1904
Bartholdi was born
in Colmar, in the Alsace region of France, to a family of German
Protestant origin (the name was latinized from Barthold, probably in the
late seventeenth century). His father, Jean-Charles, a counselor to the
prefecture and well-to-do property owner, died when Auguste was two years
old. His mother, Augusta Charlotte, moved with Auguste and his older
brother Jean-Charles to Paris, where another prosperous and influential
branch of the family lived. Throughout Bartholdi's childhood, however, the
family spent long periods in Colmar, and a passionate devotion to his
native region colored the artist's life. Auguste took drawing lessons with
Martin Rossbach (1787-1870) in Colmar, and in Paris he went on to study
sculpture with Antoine Etex (1808-1888), architecture with Henri Labrouste
(1801-1875) and Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879), and painting
with Ary Scheffer (1795-1858). Scheffer encouraged his interest in
sculpture, which he pursued further in the studio of Jean-François Soitoux
(1816-1891). He submitted a Good Samaritan sculptural group (later edited
in bronze) to the Salon of 1853, and within two years had wrested the
commission by his native city for a bronze commemorative statue of the
Napoleonic General Jean Rapp from the older Alsatian sculptor Lavalette
(1855-1856). Thus began Bartholdi's career as a prolific creator of
patriotic monuments, primarily in Alsace, and as a proficient lobbyist for
his own artistic ambitions. A journey to Egypt and Yemen in 1855 and 1886,
in the company of Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904) and other orientalist
painters, fueled Bartholdi's fascination with colossal sculpture. He
returned to Egypt in 1869 with a proposal to create a lighthouse--in the
form of a gigantic draped figure holding a torch--at the entrance to the
newly completed Suez Canal. The commission never came, but his plan found
a new form later in the Statue of Liberty. Throughout the 1860s Bartholdi
worked on well-received patriotic monuments for Colmar, including one to
the painter/engraver Martin Schongauer (1861-1863, Musée Bartholdi, Colmar)
and the fountain memorial to Admiral Bruat (1856-1864). As an officer
during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, he took part in the defense
of Colmar. Desolate over the French defeat and the loss to Germany of his
beloved Alsace, Bartholdi channeled his anguish into monuments celebrating
French valor in the defense against Germany. The most spectacular of these
was the colossal Lion of Belfort (110 centimeters high and 220 centimeters
long; 1871-1880), which was constructed of sandstone blocks against the
side of a cliff. In 1871 Bartholdi made his first trip to America, to
promote the idea of a colossal statue of Liberty as a gift from the French
to the American people in honor of the centennial of American independence.
The idea of such a gift, according to Bartholdi, was first broached in
1865 by his friend Edouard-René Lefebvre de Laboulaye, an eminent
professor of law, political philosopher, and scholar of American history.
Laboulaye's intellectual circle, including Bartholdi, shared republican
sympathies and a dedication to liberty. After the Suez colossus proposal
fell through, Bartholdi reshaped his idea into a French statue for America,
to stand on an island in New York harbor. An able and tireless
entrepreneur, Bartholdi campaigned throughout the 1870s to raise support
and funds for the statue of Liberty Enlightening the World.
Viollet-le-Duc and
later Gustave Eiffel (1832-1923), who would subsequently build the famous
tower in Paris, designed the interior iron-and-steel armature that
supported the copper sheets composing the exterior of the 151-foot statue.
Constructed in Paris, the statue was then dismantled, shipped to New York,
rebuilt, and inaugurated in 1886. During its production Bartholdi made
frequent trips to America and left several sculptural monuments there,
including a cast-iron fountain near the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
(1878). He married Jeanne-Emile Baheux, a fellow native of France, in
Providence, Rhode Island, in 1876. Continuing his energetic production of
statues, portraits, and monuments, he exhibited in the Paris salons from
1853 until 1904, the year of his death. The Statue of Liberty secured
Bartholdi a fame perhaps disproportionate to his artistic talent, but
commensurate with his ambition, drive, and showmanship in the promotion of
great artistic undertakings. In addition to sculpture, Bartholdi practiced
oil painting, drawing, watercolor, and photography. The family house in
Colmar, maintained by the artist even when he lived elsewhere, became the
Bartholdi Museum in 1922.
[This is an edited
version of the artist's biography published, or to be published, in the
NGA Systematic Catalogue]