Dreaming with Animals

Anna Hyatt Huntington and Brookgreen Gardens

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, Children&, Nonfiction, Art & Architecture, General Art
Cover of the book Dreaming with Animals by L. Kerr Dunn, University of South Carolina Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: L. Kerr Dunn ISBN: 9781611178210
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press Publication: October 3, 2017
Imprint: University of South Carolina Press Language: English
Author: L. Kerr Dunn
ISBN: 9781611178210
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Publication: October 3, 2017
Imprint: University of South Carolina Press
Language: English

Dreaming with Animals is the first children’s biography of celebrated sculptor and Brookgreen Gardens cofounder Anna Hyatt Huntington. Her remarkable life serves as an inspiration not only because of the greatness of her art but also because of her courage and perseverance. L. Kerr Dunn highlights how Anna overcame society’s expectations of women and survived a life-threatening illness to become a prolific sculptor and an important benefactor of art and wildlife until her death at age ninety-seven. As a young woman, Anna moved to New York City at a time when American women of her class rarely lived alone or worked outside the home. Although she studied briefly under famous sculptors, she soon felt restless and left art school and began to teach herself to sculpt animals by watching them closely, trying to see the animal’s true spirit and then representing that spirit in her work. Over time Anna established herself as an important animalier, an artist specializing in realistic portrayals of animals. By 1915 she was one of only ten American women artists earning enough money from the sales of her art to support herself. Later, with her husband, Archer Huntington, Anna founded South Carolina sculpture garden and wildlife preserve Brookgreen Gardens, the country’s first public sculpture garden and the world’s largest collection of figurative sculpture by American artists in an outdoor setting. This biography provides engaging details of Anna’s life, such as her tendency as a child to lie in pastures studying horses; her travels around the country with her husband in a trailer full of monkeys, dogs, and birds; and the couple’s purchase of a zoo. In Dreaming with Animals, Dunn has provided us with an affecting portrait of a strong, capable, talented, and innovative woman. Robin R. Salmon, vice president for collections and curator of sculpture at Brookgreen Gardens, provides a foreword.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Dreaming with Animals is the first children’s biography of celebrated sculptor and Brookgreen Gardens cofounder Anna Hyatt Huntington. Her remarkable life serves as an inspiration not only because of the greatness of her art but also because of her courage and perseverance. L. Kerr Dunn highlights how Anna overcame society’s expectations of women and survived a life-threatening illness to become a prolific sculptor and an important benefactor of art and wildlife until her death at age ninety-seven. As a young woman, Anna moved to New York City at a time when American women of her class rarely lived alone or worked outside the home. Although she studied briefly under famous sculptors, she soon felt restless and left art school and began to teach herself to sculpt animals by watching them closely, trying to see the animal’s true spirit and then representing that spirit in her work. Over time Anna established herself as an important animalier, an artist specializing in realistic portrayals of animals. By 1915 she was one of only ten American women artists earning enough money from the sales of her art to support herself. Later, with her husband, Archer Huntington, Anna founded South Carolina sculpture garden and wildlife preserve Brookgreen Gardens, the country’s first public sculpture garden and the world’s largest collection of figurative sculpture by American artists in an outdoor setting. This biography provides engaging details of Anna’s life, such as her tendency as a child to lie in pastures studying horses; her travels around the country with her husband in a trailer full of monkeys, dogs, and birds; and the couple’s purchase of a zoo. In Dreaming with Animals, Dunn has provided us with an affecting portrait of a strong, capable, talented, and innovative woman. Robin R. Salmon, vice president for collections and curator of sculpture at Brookgreen Gardens, provides a foreword.

More books from University of South Carolina Press

Cover of the book Reason's Dark Champions by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book South Carolina Ghosts by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Three Wild Pigs by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Weary Kingdom by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Hunting and the Ivory Tower by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Protagoras and Logos by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Days of Destruction by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book One Good Mama Bone by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Discovering South Carolina's Rock Art by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Martyr of the American Revolution by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book A Question of Mercy by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Carolina Christmas by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book The Haunted South by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Twilight on the South Carolina Rice Fields by L. Kerr Dunn
Cover of the book Understanding Franz Kafka by L. Kerr Dunn
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy