Katana VentraIP

Charles Henry Niehaus

Charles Henry Niehaus (January 24, 1855 – June 19, 1935) was an American sculptor.

Early life and education[edit]

Niehaus was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, to German parents.[1] He began working as a marble and wood carver, and then gained entrance to the McMicken School of Design in Cincinnati. He studied at the Royal Academy in Munich, Germany (1877–1881). The effect of the German study was that he retained much of the Neo-Classical flavor in his art while most other sculptors of his generation were drawn towards Beaux-Arts realism.

Career[edit]

He returned to America in 1881. By virtue of being a native Ohioan, he was commissioned to sculpt two statues of the recently assassinated President James Garfield; one for Cincinnati (Garfield's home city), and the other, in another pose, for the National Statuary Hall Collection at the United States Capitol. He moved to Rome, Italy, where he worked on the commissions, and made a study of ancient sculpture. He modeled three major male nudes during his years in Rome, including The Scraper (1883) and Caestus (1883-1885). He returned to New York City in 1885, and opened a studio.[2]


In 1887, he created a statue of Ohioan William Allen, also for Statuary Hall. In later years, he was to place statues of Oliver P. Morton of Indiana (1900), John J. Ingalls of Kansas (1905), Zachariah Chandler of Michigan (1913), George W. Glick of Kansas (1914), Ephraim McDowell of Kentucky (1929), and Henry Clay of Kentucky (1929) in the collection. His work was also part of the sculpture event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.[3]


Monuments by Niehaus can be found in many American cities. Several of the works authored by him are equestrian statues. As was the case with other sculptors of his day he also fashioned a fair amount of architectural sculpture.


In 1900 Niehaus married noted horticulturalist Regina Armstrong and moved to New Rochelle, New York.[4]


A resident of Cliffside Park, New Jersey, Niehaus died at his home there on June 19, 1935.[5]

, Piatt Park, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1882-1887

James A. Garfield

The Scraper (Athlete Using a ), Brookgreen Gardens, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, 1883[6]

Strigil

Caestus, , New York City, 1883-1885[7]

Metropolitan Museum of Art

Bas-relief panel of Surrender of the Hessians, , Trenton, New Jersey, 1891–1893 William Rudolf O'Donovan sculpted the colossal George Washington statue atop the monument, and statues of two Continental soldiers flanking the entrance. Thomas Eakins modeled two other bas-relief panels.

Trenton Battle Monument

Moses, Main Reading Room, , Washington, D.C., 1894[8]

Library of Congress

Edward Gibbon, Main Reading Room, , Washington, D.C., 1894[9]

Library of Congress

Scott Circle, Washington, D.C., 1896-1900

Samuel Hahnemann Monument

Hackley Park

Charles Hackley

Bust of Robert Blum, , Cincinnati, Ohio, ca. 1900

Cincinnati Art Museum

The Driller, Memorial, Woodlawn Cemetery, Titusville, Pennsylvania, 1901

Edwin Drake

Equestrian Statue of General Forrest, Grave, Forrest Park, Memphis, Tennessee, 1901-1905

Nathan Bedford Forrest

, Forest Park, St. Louis, Missouri, 1906

Apotheosis of St. Louis

William McKinley, , Canton, Ohio, 1907. Niehaus also modeled the lunette bas-relief over the entrance.

McKinley Memorial Mausoleum

Benjamin Harrison, , Indianapolis, Indiana, 1908.

Indiana World War Memorial Plaza

James W. Beardsley, Beardsley Park, Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1909

[13]

John Paul Jones, , West Potomac Park, Washington, D.C., 1912. Niehaus's plaster original is at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland.

John Paul Jones Memorial

Oliver Hazard Perry (1915–16), , Buffalo, New York.[14][15]

Front Park

(Francis Scott Key Monument), Fort McHenry National Monument, Baltimore, Maryland, 1916-1922.[16]

Orpheus with the Awkward Foot

Planting the Standard of Democracy in Honor of Newark's Soldiers, World War I Memorial, , Newark, New Jersey, 1923.

Lincoln Park

Hackensack War Monument, The Green, , Hackensack, New Jersey, 1924.[17]

Bergen County Court House

At least 30 monuments and several World War I memorials.

Civil War

James A. Garfield (1882–87), Piatt Park, Cincinnati, Ohio

James A. Garfield (1882–87), Piatt Park, Cincinnati, Ohio

Samuel Hahnemann Monument (1896–1900), Scott Circle, Washington, D.C.

Samuel Hahnemann Monument (1896–1900), Scott Circle, Washington, D.C.

Abraham Lincoln Monument (1900), Hackley Park, Muskegon, Michigan

Abraham Lincoln Monument (1900), Hackley Park, Muskegon, Michigan

Bust of Robert Blum (ca. 1900), Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio

Bust of Robert Blum (ca. 1900), Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio

Nathan Bedford Forrest (1901–1905), Forrest Park, Memphis, Tennessee

Nathan Bedford Forrest (1901–1905), Forrest Park, Memphis, Tennessee

William McKinley (1907), McKinley Memorial Mausoleum, Canton, Ohio

William McKinley (1907), McKinley Memorial Mausoleum, Canton, Ohio

James W. Beardsley (1909), Beardsley Park, Bridgeport, Connecticut

James W. Beardsley (1909), Beardsley Park, Bridgeport, Connecticut

John Paul Jones (1912), John Paul Jones Memorial, Washington, D.C.

John Paul Jones (1912), John Paul Jones Memorial, Washington, D.C.

Niehaus with his model for Orpheus, (Francis Scott Key Monument) (1916–1922), Baltimore, Maryland

Niehaus with his model for Orpheus, (Francis Scott Key Monument) (1916–1922), Baltimore, Maryland

World War I Monument (1923), Lincoln Park, Newark, New Jersey

World War I Monument (1923), Lincoln Park, Newark, New Jersey

Planting the Standard of Democracy (1923), Lincoln Park, Newark, New Jersey

Planting the Standard of Democracy (1923), Lincoln Park, Newark, New Jersey

Ephraim McDowell (1929), United States Capitol, Washington, D.C.

Ephraim McDowell (1929), United States Capitol, Washington, D.C.

Bzdak, Meredith Arms, photographs by Douglas Peterson, Public Sculpture in New Jersey: Monuments to Collective identity, , New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1999

Rutgers University Press

, ed. (1911). "Niehaus, Charles Henry" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 670.

Chisholm, Hugh

Connecticut State Capitol Statuary, The League of Women Voters of Connenticut: Education Fund

Hardin Campen, Richard N., Outdoor Sculpture in Ohio: A Comprehensive Overview of Outdoor Sculpture in Ohio, Mid-Nineteenth Century to the Present, West Summit Press, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, 1980

Kvaran, Einar Einarsson, Architectural Sculpture of America, unpublished manuscript

Opitz, Glenn B, Editor, Mantle Fielding's Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers, Apollo Book, Poughkeepsie NY, 1986

Proske, Beatrice Gilman, Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture, Brookgreen Gardens, South Carolina, 1968

. Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.

"Niehaus, Charles Henry"