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Artists and Their Models

Archives of American Art

The model has long been essential to the work of the artist. They often serve as artists’ muses—mortals who can sometimes be almost otherworldly in their ability to inspire creativity—yet a talent for holding still is often more important than beauty. Models are too often given short shrift in art history, their names and stories left unknown unless their fame came by way of scandal.

From reminiscences of artists to tales of rambunctious animal models and children who posed for their parents, these letters, photographs, and objects from the Archives of American Art illuminate the stories of artists and their models.


Katharine Lane Weems and her sculpture Dolphins of the sea

Katharine Lane Weems letter to Nedo Cassettari

Katharine Lane Weems modeling a dolphin in clay at the Atlantic Aquarium

Valerie Harrisse Walter essay A gorilla

Study sketches of John Daniel II

Valerie Harrisse Walter's sculpture John Daniel II

Mary Fairchild MacMonnies memoirs

Arts monthly pictorial

Frank P. Leslie letter to Philip Leslie Hale

Jonas Lie, New York, N.Y. letter to Clifton A. Woodrum, Washington, D.C.


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