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For almost eighty years, a sculpture by James
Novelli (1885-1940) entitled Victory stood diligently on
its pedestal in Saratoga Square Park in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section
of Brooklyn. The statue depicted a female with her right arm raised
holding an olive branch and her left arm holding a shield inscribed
with the phrase "E pluribus unum" - Latin for "out
of many, one."1 Commissioned in 1921,
the sculpture was designed as a war memorial to commemorate the
young soldiers of the neighborhood who had sacrificed their lives
defending the country during World War I. No stranger to vandalism,
the bronze plaques which once accompanied the statue, containing
the names of the Brooklyn military personnel killed, were stolen
in 1974; but final defeat came, under darkness, in the early morning
hours of April 21, 2000, when thieves using a blow torch ruthlessly
removed the 1,000 pound statue from its 10-foot-wide base.2
Two career criminals were soon apprehended,
but unfortunately not before the sculpture had been chopped up and
its parts sold as scrap metal. Detectives were able to recover the
head of the sculpture and about 300 other pieces, in preparation
for being melted down. The seven-foot-tall figure of a woman would
have been worth only about $300.00 as scrap. The original price
of the statue was $5,500.00, and in today's market it would cost
more than $100,000.00 to replace.3 Victory
was cast by Roman Bronze Works in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, which produced
many turn-of-the-century bronze sculptures and monuments, including
some at Rockefeller Center, until it recently went out of business.4
But who was James Novelli? What can history
tell us about the man who designed this now lost sculpture? The
information which I uncovered both disturbed and intrigued me. I
was transported into a unique period of history, a time between
the great World Wars; a score of years filled with a multitude of
extremes: prosperity and depression, peace and anxiety, jubilation
and sorrow - in a similar manner these disparities would be echoed
in the life and work of the artist.
James Novelli was an Italian-American born
in Sulmona, a province of Aquila, Italy, in 1885. When he was five,
his family immigrated to America and, like many Italian-Americans,
settled in New York City. While a young student at Public School
23 he would take chalk from the classroom blackboard and create
sidewalk drawings. Impressed by his skills and natural abilities,
both his parents and his teachers encouraged his artistic talents.
As a result, in 1903 when he was eighteen years old, he returned
to Italy and studied under Giulio Monteverde, Ettore Ferrari, and
Silvio Sbricoli.5 While still a student
he won honorable mention at the International Exposition held in
Paris in 1906. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Rome in 1908.
Upon Novelli's return to New York after his
graduation, it soon became apparent that he would be able to make
a good living in his chosen field of art. From the end of the Civil
War through the turn of the century there was an abundance of activity
and funds given toward public sculptural commissions. Having studied
with Monteverde, a master sculptor who obtained numerous commissions
for monuments celebrating national heroes and funerary memorials,6
Novelli was well trained and prepared to give the public what it
wanted. It wasn't long before he became recognized as a sculptor
and his reputation expanded beyond the New York area. An ample number
of lucrative commissions began coming in from cities throughout
the United States.
By the end of World War I there was a renewed
nation-wide demand for memorials and monuments. The country was
heading into the 1920s and money was plentiful. As is always the
case in a prosperous economy, people had the money to indulge in
the luxury of the fine arts. A new class of people emerged; newly
famous celebrities, actors, and musicians, came to be regarded -
and regarded themselves - as figures important enough to warrant
portraits. At the same time there arose a large number of wealthy
patrons who could afford sculpture and who desired to embellish
the gardens on their private estates in a similar fashion to the
public parks. Novelli was an accomplished artist in this flourishing
market, with a promising future before him. In 1922 he was elected
to the membership of the National Sculpture Society, at a time when
the honorary president of the Society was Daniel Chester French.
The Exhibition of American Sculpture Guide: April 14th -August
1st of 1923 notes that he exhibited three of his works along
with the notable sculptor Frederick W. Mac Monnies, and from April
to October of 1929, Novelli exhibited in Contemporary American
Sculpture: the California Palace of the Legion of Honor at Lincoln
Park in San Francisco.
Since its inception in the 1890s, and for
decades to follow, members of the National Sculpture Society were
the most important sculptors at work in the United States. It was
the aim of the National Sculpture Society to "spread the knowledge
of good sculpture; ...and encourage the production of ideal sculpture
for the household and museums", and certainly to "...promote
the decoration of public buildings, squares and parks with sculpture
of high class."7 The Society provided
sculptors with the opportunity for work and the chance to establish
their reputations. Members consistently secured the best and richest
commissions available, and their works dominated public spaces throughout
the 1920s.8 Novelli was also a member
of the Architectural League of New York. Even after the First World
War often a sculptor's livelihood depended on the favor of architects
for commissions. The goal of the Architectural League was to promote
the ideal of mutual enrichment through collaboration. Muralists,
sculptors and many other artists were invited to become members
and their annual exhibition included sections for landscape, architecture,
painting, sculpture and the decorative arts.9
With the exception of 1926, Novelli displayed his sculptural works
at the League's annual exhibitions from 1922 through 1928. At the
Thirty-Eighth Annual Exhibition, in 1923, a set of his bronze mausoleum
doors in Calvary Cemetery in New York won the Henry O. Avery Prize
for sculpture.10
As the pendulum swings, so does the American
economy, and the Great Depression was just waiting in the wings.
In 1930, Novelli was dropped from the membership of the National
Sculpture Society11 and there was no reason
given on his membership card (present-day opinion holds that he
either simply let his dues expire or was not interested in renewing
his membership). Very little is mentioned about him or his works
after that date. He maintained his studio at 400 West Twenty-Third
Street in Manhattan through the lean years, but was forced to give
it up in 1939. Despondent over lack of new commissions and alarmed
about war conditions in Europe, Novelli took his own life at the
age of fifty-five on the afternoon of May 31, 1940. His wife Lillian
came home from work to find that the sculptor, alone in the apartment,
had hung himself with a clothesline thrown over the transom of a
bathroom door.12
Novelli lived at a time when a sculptor, unless
looked upon as famous, was often thought of as a craftsman, simply
a "statue-maker". Professional sculptors referred to their
work as "sculpture", whereas architects, politicians and
the general public mostly used the term "statue". Yet,
it was also during this time that memorials and monuments were typically
dedicated with great pomp and ceremony. The events leading up to
the unveiling of the memorials were thoroughly planned and orchestrated,
and frequently covered by the press.
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Such was the case when in Jersey City Novelli's
memorial America Triumphant was unveiled at Pershing Field
in 1922, commemorating the 147 soldiers who died in the War. The
dedication ceremony took place on Independence Day, and a crowd
watched in awe as an airplane circled the crowd for two hours and
at timed intervals dropped a rose to the ground until 147, each
one representing one man who died, had made an immense bouquet at
the foot of the monument.13 A major New
York newspaper covered the pageantry and reported the details of
the event along with the names of the dignitaries invited. However,
there is neither mention nor credit given to Novelli. His work was
treated merely as a purchase, something one buys and shows off with
no thought given to the originator.
A similar scenario ensued with the unveiling
of his Saratoga Park Memorial, the Brooklyn Victory, on September
11, 1921. A short newspaper article stated that more than 2,000
persons witnessed the ceremony: a detachment of the Thirteenth Coast
Defense Command, the 106th Infantry Post, 244 Veterans of Foreign
Wars and principal speakers Senator Charles Lockwood, Borough President
Edward Riegelmann, Judge George Martin and District Attorney Harry
Lewis,14 but once again no mention was
made of Novelli. One cannot help but wonder if Novelli was even
present at the ceremony, or how he felt about the press ignoring
his part in the creation of the monument. Long forgotten for over
sixty years, the artist and his works remained obscure until two
blundering thieves brought his name to life once more.
Some of Novelli's more successful works include
a group entitled Motherhood and another entitled Rock
of Ages (Durham, N.C.); sets of bronze doors for the Sigman
mausoleum and Judge Schmuck mausoleum, at Woodlawn Cemetery (New
York, N.Y.); and other funerary monuments including the Bigham mausoleum,
at Hawthorne, New York; La Gioia, and John Lordi mausoleums, at
Calvary Cemetery, (Queens, N.Y); The Rowan Panel, at Woodlawn
Cemetery, N.Y.; La Mattina-Guerriero, Calvary Cemetery, N.Y.; a
memorial for Art Smith, pioneer aviator, in Fort Wayne, Indiana;
a Columbus memorial at West Side Park, Jersey City, New Jersey;
and the MacSwegan memorial at Calvary Cemetery in Pittsburgh. Novelli
also produced various war memorials for Winfield, Queens; Bellows
Falls, Vermont, and Clason Point in the Bronx; and the Thurman
Memorial in Atlanta. Bronze portrait busts by Novelli exist
of President Warren G. Harding (in Marion, Ohio), Julius Berger,
Irving Green, Margaret Lawson, Anita Novarra, Peter Anderson, and
portraits of his father and grandmother. Finally, Novelli also produced
a number of portrait reliefs, most notably of James Cardinal Gibbons
(Catholic University, Washington, D.C.), Charlotte Brainard, Charles
G. Brainard, Dorothy Langley, Dora Ford, Francis P. De Luna, and
William B. Drake, and a Madonna and child, now in a private collection
in South Norwalk, Conneticut.15
The Gilded Age, that dynamic epoch between
the end of the Civil War and just prior to World War I, was an extremely
productive era for the advancement of American sculpture. The success
of the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876 inspired similar
commemorative events in other cities. These many extravagant expositions
were paramount in contributing to the public's awareness of sculpture
as an art form, and the demand for sculptural commissions was occurring
at an unprecedented rate. Novelli, no different than any other young
artist who was eager to make a name for himself, was caught up in
this frenzy. The perpetuation of this plentiful and lucrative art
market convinced an extraordinarily large number of young artists
to channel their talents toward sculpture. This trend continued
throughout the early decades of the twentieth century until the
number of sculptors escalated to an unparalleled proportion.
In retrospect, it was an exuberant economic
period that in actuality could not be sustained indefinitely. Novelli
was but one victim of this inflated interval of sculptural history
-- unfortunately, he was not alone. There were many, many more sculptors
active during that era who must have suffered similar adversities
as Novelli, but whose stories will probably never be told.
If there were a need to judge the achievements of these men,
some people would say that their success should be measured by
their fame and fortune. I prefer to consider the ideas of Ralph
Waldo Emerson who wrote, "... to appreciate beauty; to find
the best in others; to give of one's self; to leave the world
a bit better ... this is to have succeeded."
References>>
Author's Bio>>
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