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Girl Skating

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  • 3d model of Girl Skating
    3D Model

    Object Details

    Artist

    Abastenia St. Léger Eberle, born Webster City, IA 1878-died New York City 1942

    Exhibition Label

    "The people of the East Side to me are like the rough boulder. They have broken off the mountain of humanity in all their primal crudity. They are real, rugged, unpolished, entirely free."
    --Abastenia St. Léger Eberle, 1916
    Who is this young girl, screaming with delight as she speeds downhill on a roller skate?
    She was likely the child of an immigrant family living on Manhattan's Lower East Side, where Abastenia St. Léger Eberle worked at a community center for children. Eberle often sculpted scenes of everyday life she observed in her working-poor neighborhood, which was composed mainly of Italian, Slavic, and ethnic Jewish immigrants. Both Eberle and her patrons viewed these communities as amusing and exotic.
    At a time when "White" was narrowly identified as "Anglo-Saxon," Southern and Eastern European immigrants would not have been considered such. As with all racial categories, the social construction of whiteness has changed over time. As various European ethnic groups arrived in the United States, they gradually became White as they accumulated power and the concept of whiteness expanded through the events and policies of the twentieth century.
    Label text from The Shape of Power: Stories of Race and American Sculpture November 8, 2024 -- September 14, 2025

    Luce Center Label

    Abastenia Eberle created several bronze casts of Girl Skating (also known as Roller Skating or Girl with Roller Skate). A year after she was elected to the National Sculpture Society, Eberle exhibited Girl Skating in New York City and Philadelphia. As her first piece that displayed the children of Manhattan's streets, it marked the beginning of her focus on urban poverty. Eberle addressed social issues in this sculpture while capturing the spirit of these poor communities. Girl Skating's uneven surfaces accentuate the girl's tattered appearance, yet her outstretched arms and open-mouthed expression still convey joy and the thrill of play.

    Luce Object Quote

    "The children of the East side play without restraint; their griefs and their joys are expressed with absolute abandon. . . . They laugh loudly. They shout. They race on roller skates and dance unrestrainedly. I can get at the human quality in these children. They are real— real as can be. They express life." The artist, quoted in the Washington Post, 1906

    Credit Line

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase through the C.K. Williams Foundation

    Date

    modeled 1906

    Object number

    2011.29

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    Sculpture

    Medium

    bronze

    Dimensions

    12 7/8 x 11 1/2 x 6 3/4 in. (32.8 x 29.2 x 17.2 cm)

    See more items in

    Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection

    Department

    Painting and Sculpture

    Data Source

    Smithsonian American Art Museum

    Topic

    Figure female\child\full length
    Recreation\sport and play\skating

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk7bc1473a3-e931-4417-8d32-f93d1b72fc40

    Record ID

    saam_2011.29

    Discover More

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    Race, Arts, and Aesthetics

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