Karl Gerhardt

Karl Gerhardt was a United States sculptor, best known for his death mask of President Ulysses S. Grant and a portrait bust of Mark Twain.

Karl Gerhardt
Karl Gerhardt, c 1879
BornJanuary 7, 1853
Boston, Massachusetts
DiedMay 7, 1940(1940-05-07) (aged 87)
NationalityAmerican
Known forSculpture
Notable work
Death mask of Ulysses S. Grant, American Civil War statues
Spouse(s)Harriet ("Josie") Josephine Gloyd
Patron(s)Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)

Biography

Karl Gerhardt was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on January 7, 1853.[1] He attended Phillips School in Boston. By 1870 he was apprenticed to a house painter in Chicopee, Massachusetts, where he later became a machinist at Ames Foundry. He showed considerable talent in mechanics, and later became a designer of machinery at Hartford, Connecticut.[2]

In 1874, he went to California. By 1880, he had returned east to Hartford, and married Harriet Josephine Gloyd. He worked for a spell as chief machinist at the Pratt and Whitney Machine Tool Company in Hartford and pursued sculpting in his leisure hours.[2]

Death mask of Ulysses Grant, 1885

His first known sculpture was a bust of his wife, Josie, titled, A Startled Bather. On February 21, 1881, Harriet Gerhardt knocked on Samuel Clemens's door and asked Clemens to come to their home to view a sculpture that Gerhardt had completed. Clemens went to the couple's home and was surprised to see that the sculpture was a life sized depiction of Josie, nude to the waist. Clemens asked painter James Wells Champney and prominent portrait bust sculptor, John Quincy Adams Ward to evaluate Gerhardt's work. After consulting with the art experts, Clemens and his wife Olivia decided to finance Gerhard's art education in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts.[3]

With the support of Clemens's prominent artist friends, including Ward, Augustus St. Gaudens and Olin Warner, Gerhardt sailed to Paris with his wife in March 1881. Gerhardt passed the entrance examination to the École des Beaux-Arts on his first attempt and was enrolled in classes by August 1881. Gerhardt soon requested additional money from Clemens to pay for living models and private art instruction. Clemens agreed to the extra funding and offered drawing lessons for Gerhardt's wife, whom Clemens affectionately called "Mrs Joe".[3] By 1883, the Gerhardts were running low on money and sent letters to Clemens asking for more funds. Clemens helped Gerhardt in getting commissions, and was probably instrumental in Gerhardt being given the commission for a Nathan Hale statute for the Connecticut Capitol in Hartford in 1885. A photograph of the portrait bust of Clemens, that Gerhardt created, was used on the frontispiece of Clemens's first edition of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.[3]

General Warren statue

Over time, Clemens became increasingly dissatisfied with Gerhardt's constant demands for funds and his lack of gratitude.[3] Putting his disappointment aside, Clemens passed along Gerhardt's request to Adam Badeau, Grant's military secretary, to cast the death mask of the terminally ill President Grant. Grant's son Fred agreed to the request.[2] After President Grant had died and the death mask had been cast, Gerhardt refused to give the mask to Grant's family, asserting that the mask was his personal property. Clemens was dismayed by Gerhardt's refusal, and intervened when the family threatened Gerhardt with a lawsuit. Clemens agreed to forgive all debts that Gerhardt owed to Clemens and his wife, an amount of $17,000, in return for returning the mask to Grant's family. It is not known if Clemens was aware at the time that Gerhardt had secretly made a second death mask of Grant.[3]

In the mid- to late 1880s, Gerhardt received commissions for memorial statues in New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Pennsylvania. Gerhardt's wife gave birth to a son, Lawrence, in 1890. In the late 1880s, Clemens faced financial difficulties of his own due to investment failures. He closed his mansion in Hartford in 1891 and moved with his family to Europe. Gerhard's sole patron would no longer be able to help him find work. Gerhardt's commissions had decreased dramatically by 1891 and he eventually sought work as a draftsman and machinist. In 1897, Gerhardt was working for bicycle manufacturer, Pope Manufacturing Company in Hartford.

Gerhardt's wife died in 1897 succumbing to tetanus after being injured by a rusty nail. By 1906, Gerhardt had moved to New Orleans. In 1909, it was reported by the New Orleans Times Democrat that the famous sculptor was struggling financially and working as a manual laborer. By 1920, Gerhardt had moved to Shreveport, Louisiana, and was working as a tailor. Gerhardt died May 7, 1940, in Shreveport.[1]

Selected works

Carrie Welton Fountain (1888), Waterbury, Connecticut.

Civil War memorials

References

  1. "Noted artist of Blanchard dies Tuesday". Shrevepoint Times. May 8, 1940. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  2. Schmidt, Barbara. "Mark Twain and Karl Gerhardt". Twain Quotes.com. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  3. Cummings, Hildegard (2007). Charles Ethan Porter:African American Master of Still Life. University Press of New England. pp. 52–53. ISBN 978-0972449762.
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