Trivia question: Augustus Saint-Gaudens

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by mac266, Jul 19, 2015.

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On whose work did Augustus Saint-Gaudens model his work?

  1. Dupre

    7 vote(s)
    63.6%
  2. Pisanello

    3 vote(s)
    27.3%
  3. Brenner

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  4. Theodore Roosevelt

    1 vote(s)
    9.1%
  1. mac266

    mac266 Well-Known Member

    Here's a trivia question for you all:
     
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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Since Saint-Gaudens studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, 1867-1870, I'm going to guess that it was Dupre.

    Chris
     
  4. messydesk

    messydesk Well-Known Member

    Saint-Gaudens and Dupre even have the same haircuts, although Pisanello did medallic portraits while Dupre was a painter.
     
  5. PennyGuy

    PennyGuy US and CDN Copper

    He went to Italy from France and worked with Pisanello
     
  6. medjoy

    medjoy Active Member

    Pisanello died in 1455. Augustus Saint-Gaudens lived from 1848-1907.
    Teddy Roosevelt chose him to design the $20 Double Eagle, the $10 Gold Indian Head Eagle and a pattern for the one cent which was never produced.

    It is my understanding that Donatello (not the teenage mutant ninja turtle, the other one:)) was a great source of inspiration for Saint-Gaudens.
     
  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    The $10 Indian obv WAS the pattern for the one cent piece.
     
  8. medjoy

    medjoy Active Member

  9. mac266

    mac266 Well-Known Member

    ANSWER: Pisanello

    From the ANA's "Introduction to Numismatics" course book, chapter by Cory Gillilland: "Augustus Saint-Gaudens' work, modeled after the prototype medals created by Pisanello in the 15th century, had an impact as vital as that derived from the French academies..."

    Some of you voted Dupre because they lived at the same time, but the question asked the person whose work he modeled. It did not ask if he trained directly under this person, so the fact Pisanello was dead long before Saint-Gaudens was born is irrelevant.

    Illustration: Being a student of history, and a professional military officer, I have largely based my leadership style on "Stonewall" Jackson. I am neither a southerner, nor were my ancestors Confederates (in fact, in my genealogical research I have found three who fought for the Union and no Confederates), and I did not live in the same time as Jackson. The fact Jackson died 150 years before I was born is irrelevant, because I study his work, philosophies, and leadership style just like Saint-Gardens studied Pisanello. Thus, one could say I model my work after Jackson.

    Someone voted Roosevelt. Roosevelt wasn't even an artist. Sure, he commissioned Saint-Gaudens to make the double eagle gold piece, but Saint-Gaudens did not "model" his work after Roosevelt's. Roosevelt had no work to model! Seriously, it wasn't a trick question.

    The poll I posted is actually a word-for-word copy of the test question the ANA has in their correspondence course.
     
  10. medjoy

    medjoy Active Member

    In response to the above quote, I posted the death date as a point of clarification, that St-G and Pisanello weren't contemporaries.
    BTW I voted Pisanello
     
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