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Diana

Augustus Saint-Gaudens1892-1893

Philadelphia Museum of Art

Philadelphia Museum of Art
Philadelphia, United States

Diana is arguably the best-known work of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, who was recognized at the turn of the century as the country’s finest sculptor. When installed in 1893 on the tower of New York’s Madison Square Garden to serve as a weather vane, Diana ruled the highest point in Manhattan. The sculpture’s gilded form caught the sun during the day and was illuminated at night by the city’s first electric floodlights.
Madison Square Garden was demolished in 1925 and the Philadelphia Museum of Art adopted the sculpture in 1932. Diana has reigned as the goddess of the Museum’s Great Stair Hall ever since.
In 2013–14, Museum conservators repaired and preserved Diana’s copper structure and restored the sculpture’s original gold leaf finish. Diana gleams brilliantly once again through the support of Bank of America.

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  • Title: Diana
  • Creator Lifespan: 1848/1907
  • Creator Nationality: American (born Ireland)
  • Creator Gender: Male
  • Creator Death Place: Cornish, New Hampshire, United States
  • Creator Birth Place: Dublin, Ireland
  • Date: 1892-1893
  • Location Created: Salem, Ohio, United States, North and Central America and Cornish, New Hampshire, United States, North and Central America
  • Physical Dimensions: h157 in (Height)
  • Provenance: Gift of the New York Life Insurance Company, 1932
  • Type: Sculpture
  • Rights: © 2014 Philadelphia Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
  • External Link: Philadelphia Museum of Art
  • Medium: Gilded copper sheets
  • Artist/Maker: Augustus Saint-Gaudens, American (born Ireland), 1848 - 1907
Philadelphia Museum of Art

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