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William Ordway Partridge
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William Ordway Partridge : ウィキペディア英語版
William Ordway Partridge

William Ordway Partridge (April 11, 1861 – May 22, 1930) was an American sculptor whose public commissions can be found in New York City and other locations.
==Life and career==
William Partridge was born in Paris to American parents descended from the Pilgrims in Massachusetts; his father was a representative of A.T. Stewart. At the end of the reign of Napoleon III, Partridge travelled to America to attend Adelphi Academy in Brooklyn and Columbia University (graduated 1883) in New York. After a year of experimention in theatre, he went abroad to study sculpture. During a brief stint in the Paris studio of William-Adolphe Bouguereau, he formed a close friendship with the neo-Gothic architect Ralph Adams Cram on his 1887 trip.〔Douglass Shand-Tucci, ''Boston Bohemia, 1881-1900: Ralph Adams Cram: Life and Architecture'' (University of Massachusetts Press) 1996:59.〕 He knew the young Bernard Berenson in Florence, where he studied in the studio of Galli, and Rome, in the studio of Pio Welonski (1883–85).〔''Encyclopædia Britannica'' 1911: 'William Ordway Partridge"; Smithsonian American Art Museum〕
His published work includes articles on aesthetics and several art history books including ''Art For America'' (1894), ''The Song Life of a Sculptor'' (1894), and ''The Technique of Sculpture'' (1895). He also wrote poems and published the verse novels ''Angel of Clay'' (1900) and ''The Czar's Gift'' (1906).
Aside from his public commissions, his work consisted mostly of portrait busts. In 1893 eleven of his works were displayed at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, according to the official catalog of the Fine Arts Building at the fair, where he exhibited sculptures of ''Alexander Hamilton'' and ''William Shakespeare''〔The ''Shakespeare'' remained in Lincoln Park, Chicago. (''Appleton's Cyclopaedia'')〕 as well as portraits. In this same catalog Partridge was listed as living in Milton, Massachusetts. He maintained homes and studios in both Milton and New York. Among his studio assistants on West 38th Street in New York was Lee Lawrie.
Partridge went on to lecture at Stanford University in California, and assumed a professorship at Columbian University, now George Washington University, in Washington, D.C.
His life-size statue of the Native American princess, ''Pocahontas'', was unveiled in Jamestown, Virginia in 1922. Queen Elizabeth II viewed this statue in 1957 and again on May 4, 2007, while visiting Jamestown on the 400th anniversary of the founding of the first successful English colonial settlement in America. On October 5, 1958, a replica of the Pocahontas statue by Partridge was dedicated as a memorial to the princess at the location of her burial in 1617 at St. George's Church in Gravesend, England. The Governor of Virginia presented the replica statue as a gift to the British people.
Partridge died in Manhattan, New York on May 22, 1930.

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