Great Hall. Detail Of Putti (Gardener With A Spade And A Rake) On The Grand Staircase By Philip Martiny. Library Of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C., 2007

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Image Title: Great Hall. Detail Of Putti (Gardener With A Spade And A Rake) On The Grand Staircase By Philip Martiny. Library Of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C., 2007

Creator: Highsmith, Carol M., 1946-, photographer

Date: 2007

Notes: Exhibit caption: "The figures on the staircase are known as "putti" and represent the various occupations, habits, and pursuits of contemporary American life at the time when the Jefferson Building was built in the late nineteenth century. A putto (plural putti) is a figure of a pudgy human baby, almost always male, often naked and having wings, found especially in Italian Renaissance art. The four bottom figures include: A Gardener, with spade and rake; An Entomologist, with a specimen box slung over his shoulder, running to catch a butterfly in his net; A Student, with a book in his hand and a mortar board on his head; A Printer, with types, a press, and a type case. The four top figures include: A Musician, with a lyre by his side, studying pages of a music book; A Physician, grinding drugs in a mortar, with a distilling vessel beside him, and the serpent sacred to medicine; An Electrician, with a star of electric rays shining on his brow and a telephone receiver at his ear; An Astronomer, with a telescope and a globe, encircled by the signs of the zodiac that he is measuring by the aid of a pair of compasses." (Source: MyLOC.gov Great Hall exhibit, 2008)

Related Names: Martiny, Philip, 1858-1927

Subjects: Architectural sculpture--Washington (D.C.)--2000-2010
Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building (Washington, D.C.)--2000-2010
Putti--2000-2010

Places: Washington D.C.

Original Media: Photograph

Collections: Carol M. Highsmith Archive » more info...

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