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Carving
To Commemorate The Workmen of The Center
Gaston Lachaise
American, born France. 1882 - 1935
Above 45 Rockefeller Plaza Entrance
After immigrating to America, Gaston Lachaise abandoned his European academic training and began his own artistic explorations, favoring celebrations of the human body. Commissioned as a tribute to labor, these sculptures depict the workers as muscular, heroic male figures, idealizing both manual labor and supreme physical beings. Their strong shapes and curvilinear forms reveal the artist’s knowledge of human anatomy and musculature. The same year they were installed, Lachaise was given a one-man show by the Museum of Modern Art.
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