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Artist Essays
Essays page for Lucy Currier (Wilson) Richards ((early 20th century)), known for Figure and fountain sculpture, nudes. Showing 1 essays and articles.
Lucy Currier (Wilson) Richards ESSAYS
early 20th century. Known for: Figure and fountain sculpture, nudes.
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A Bit O' Pinehurst History. By Paul R. Dunn, Pinehurst Country Club Historian. Little children are lifted to touch it, members rub it for good luck, and visiting tourists take photos of it as a... Read full biography
A Bit O' Pinehurst History. By Paul R. Dunn, Pinehurst Country Club Historian. Little children are lifted to touch it, members rub it for good luck, and visiting tourists take photos of it as a keepsake of their time in Pinehurst. It is the Putter Boy sundial statue, located by the practice green... Read full biography
A Bit O' Pinehurst History. By Paul R. Dunn, Pinehurst Country Club Historian. Little children are lifted to touch it, members rub it for good luck, and visiting tourists take photos of it as a keepsake of their time in Pinehurst. It is the Putter Boy sundial statue, located by the practice green at the club. Originally it was known as the Sundial Boy or the Sun Dial Golf Lad. In Gorham Company catalogs the piece was sometimes referred to as a Bronze Caddy Sundial. The sculptress, Mrs. Lucy P.... Read full biography
A Bit O' Pinehurst History. By Paul R. Dunn, Pinehurst Country Club Historian. Little children are lifted to touch it, members rub it for good luck, and visiting tourists take photos of it as a keepsake of their time in Pinehurst. It is the Putter Boy sundial statue, located by the practice green at the club. Originally it was known as the Sundial Boy or the Sun Dial Golf Lad. In Gorham Company catalogs the piece was sometimes referred to as a Bronze Caddy Sundial. The sculptress, Mrs. Lucy P. Currier Richards, created the statue on commission from Leonard Tufts, whose wife was a friend of the artist. The arrangements for the creation of the statue may have been completed when Lucy Richards visited the Tufts here in their "quaint log... Read full biography
A Bit O' Pinehurst History. By Paul R. Dunn, Pinehurst Country Club Historian. Little children are lifted to touch it, members rub it for good luck, and visiting tourists take photos of it as a keepsake of their time in Pinehurst. It is the Putter Boy sundial statue, located by the practice green at the club. Originally it was known as the Sundial Boy or the Sun Dial Golf Lad. In Gorham Company catalogs the piece was sometimes referred to as a Bronze Caddy Sundial. The sculptress, Mrs. Lucy P. Currier Richards, created the statue on commission from Leonard Tufts, whose wife was a friend of the artist. The arrangements for the creation of the statue may have been completed when Lucy Richards visited the Tufts here in their "quaint log cabin" in 1911 as reported by The Outlook newspaper. The National Sculpture... Read full biography
