Adams Memorial (Saint-Gaudens)

The Adams Memorial is a grave marker for Marian Hooper Adams and Henry Adams located in Section E of Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington, D.C., featuring a cast bronze allegorical sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens. The shrouded figure is seated against a granite block which forms one side of a hexagonal plaza, designed by architect Stanford White. Across from the statue is a stone bench for visitors. The whole is sheltered by a close screen of dense conifers.

Adams Memorial
The Adams Memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Stanford White
LocationRock Creek Cemetery
Webster St. and Rock Creek Church Rd., NW.
Washington, D.C.
Coordinates38°56′50.5″N 77°0′37″W
Built1891
ArchitectAugustus Saint-Gaudens
Stanford White
NRHP reference No.72001420
Added to NRHPMarch 16, 1972

History

Erected in 1891, the monument was commissioned by author/historian Henry Adams (a member of the Adams political family) as a memorial to his wife, Marian "Clover" Hooper Adams. Suffering from depression, she had killed herself by ingesting potassium cyanide, a chemical used to develop photographs.[1] Adams advised Saint-Gaudens to contemplate iconic images from Buddhist devotional art. One such subject, Kannon (also known as Guan Yin, the Bodhisattva of compassion), is frequently depicted as a seated figure draped in cloth. In particular, a painting of Kannon by Kanō Motonobu, in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and shown to Saint-Gaudens by John LaFarge, is said to have played a major role in influencing the conception and design of this sculpture.[2]

Adams Memorial, overview. Photo: HABS 1974.

Henry Adams, who traveled to Japan with John LaFarge ostensibly to find inspiration for this memorial, particularly wanted elements of serenely immovable Buddhist human figures to be contrasted with the waterfall-like robe associated with Kannon. In addition to the still and flowing elements, the monument's dualism includes male-female fusion in the figure itself and blends Asian and European ideals of figure. These checks to the standard heroic figure combine to make a "countermonument" for a woman who disliked monuments, generally.[3] Saint-Gaudens may also have been influenced by Parisian funerary art from his stay in France.[4]

Saint-Gaudens's name for the bronze figure is The Mystery of the Hereafter and The Peace of God that Passeth Understanding, but the public commonly called it Grief – an appellation that Henry Adams apparently disliked. In a letter addressed to Homer Saint-Gaudens, on January 24, 1908, Adams instructed him:

"Do not allow the world to tag my figure with a name! Every magazine writer wants to label it as some American patent medicine for popular consumption – Grief, Despair, Pear's Soap, or Macy's Mens' Suits Made to Measure. Your father meant it to ask a question, not to give an answer; and the man who answers will be damned to eternity like the men who answered the Sphinx."

In his The Education ... Henry Adams reflects on the statue and its interpreters: "His first step, on returning to Washington, took him out to the cemetery known as Rock Creek, to see the bronze figure which St. Gaudens had made for him in his absence. ... in all that it had to say, he never once thought of questioning what it meant. He supposed its meaning to be the one commonplace about it – the oldest idea known to human thought. ... As Adams sat there, numbers of people came, for the figure seemed to have become a tourist fashion, and all wanted to know its meaning. ... Like all great artists, St. Gaudens held up the mirror and no more."[5]

At the time of Saint-Gaudens's death, the statue was well known as an important work of American sculpture. Its popularity inspired at least one prominent copy, the Black Aggie, which was sold to General Felix Agnus for his gravesite.[6][7]

On March 16, 1972, the Adams Memorial was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

References

  1. McCullough, David. The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris.
  2. "The Third Mind". Augustus Saint-Gaudens. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Retrieved 21 February 2009.
  3. Benfey, Christopher (2003). The Great Wave: Gilded Age Misfits, Japanese Eccentrics, and the Opening of Old Japan. New York, NY: Random House. pp. 109–175. ISBN 0-375-50327-7. [Clover Adams chastised] sculptor William Wetmore Story for ruining 'nice blocks of white marble with his classic Sybils'
  4. Field, Cynthia R. (1995). "The Adams Memorial" (PDF). Office of Architectural History and Historic Preservation. Smithsonian Preservation Quarterly. The Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 February 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2009. Adams, who said his own name for it was "The Peace of God", stated that "The whole meaning and feeling of the figure is in its universality and anonymity."
  5. Adams, Henry (1918). "Chapter XXI". The Education of Henry Adams. Massachusetts Historical Society.
  6. Mills, Cynthia J. (Summer 2000). "Casting Shadows: The Adams memorial and its doubles". American Art. Smithsonian American Art Museum. 14 (2): 2–25. doi:10.1086/424354.
  7. Friedrich, Otto. Clover: The tragic love story of Clover and Henry Adams and their brilliant life in America's gilded age. – An informative and engaging study of the memorial and the relationship between Clover and Henry Adams. See also, Clover Adams: A Gilded and Heartbreaking Life by Natalie Dykstra, New York:Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013.
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