Everything about C Paul Jennewein totally explained
Carl Paul Jennewein (
December 2,
1890–
February 23,
1978) was a
German-born
American sculptor.
Early career
Jennewein was born in
Stuttgart in Germany. He
immigrated to the United States in 1907.
He was
apprenticed with the firm of Buhler and Lauter in
New York where he received his early training. He took evening classes at the
Art Students League of New York. Much of his early work was as a
muralist, including in 1912 four murals for the
Woolworth Building; the first building to be called "the Cathedral of Commerce."
In 1915 Jennewein became a
naturalized U.S. citizen. Soon afterward he entered the
United States Army. In 1916 his tour was cut short when he was awarded an
honorable discharge after receiving the
Prix de Rome, a highly sought-after art award. This allowed him to study at the
American Academy in Rome for the next three years; in
Rome Jennewein turned his attention to sculpture.
Architectural sculpture
- Lincoln Life Insurance Building (Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1923)
- Education Building (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 1931)
- British Empire Building at Rockefeller Center (Manhattan, 1932)
- Pediment, Philadelphia Museum of Art (1933)
- Justice Department Building - over 50 separate sculptural elements and served as the overall design consultant, in collaboration with Zantzinger, Borie and Medary (Washington, D.C., 1934)
- Kansas City City Hall (Kansas City, Missouri, 1936)
- Finance Building, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 1938)
- Two stone pylons at the Brooklyn Public Library (Brooklyn, 1939)
- Dauphin County Court, exterior and interior (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 1941)
- Fulton County Building Annex (Atlanta, Georgia, 1950)
- West Virginia State Office Building (Charleston, West Virginia, 1950)
- Two panels inside the White House (Washington, D.C., 1954)
- Two monumental figures for the Rayburn House Office Building (Washington, D.C., 1964)
Later career
The work that he's probably best known for today, and which garnered him much praise when it was unveiled in
1933, was the polychromed figures in the pediment of the
Philadelphia Museum of Art. Jennewein was one of 250 sculptors who exhibited in the
3rd Sculpture International held at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the summer of 1949.
In the course of his career Jennewein produced at least five monumental eagles: one at the entrance to
Arlington National Cemetery in
Arlington, Virginia, another on the
Arlington Memorial Bridge, connecting Arlington with
Washington, D.C., the third on the Federal Office Building in New York, the fourth, a
Spanish-American War Memorial in
Rochester, New York.
The fifth was at
Ardennes Memorial located in
Neuville-en-Condroz in
Belgium. He also produced somewhat smaller eagles for the gates of the
Embassy of the United States in Paris.
Jennewein's sculpture, which never strayed too far from the classical ideals that he'd come to so admire while in Rome, became increasingly modernized and his style comfortably fits into the
Greco Deco category.
Jennewein's work received some attention when his
Noyes Armillary Sphere disappeared during a
riot in
Washington, D.C. in the turbulent 1960s. It hasn't yet been recovered.
Jennewein died on February 23, 1978.
In 2002, two of Jennewein's semi-nude figures in the
Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building in
Washington, D.C.were hidden by a curtain. This has been linked to the exposed
breast on the female figure,
Spirit of Justice (the male counterpart is
Majesty of Law). In 2005 the curtain was removed.
Further Information
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