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Roman Bronze Works : ウィキペディア英語版
Roman Bronze Works
Roman Bronze Works, now operated as Roman Bronze Studios, is a bronze foundry in New York. Established in 1897 by Riccardo Bertelli, it was the first American foundry to specialize in the lost-wax casting method,〔(Metropolitan Museum of Art: American bronze casting )〕 and was the country's pre-eminent art foundry during the American Renaissance (ca. 1876-1917).
The foundry trademarked its namesake, Roman Bronze Works in 1900.
In 1908, the foundry built a home and studio for sculptor Harry Merwin Shrady at White Plains, New York. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as the Leo Friedlander Studio.
Long a sub-contractor to Louis Comfort Tiffany's Tiffany Studios, the foundry moved in 1927 to Tiffany's red brick factory in Corona, Queens, New York.〔(Christpher Gray, " Streetscapes: Tiffany Studios; In Queens, a Remembrance of a Luminous Legend" ''New York Times'', 27 December 1987 ). Accessed 25 September 2008.〕
The foundry's mold makers, casters, chasers and finishers, and patinaters cast sculptures from plaster and terra cotta models provided by sculptors. They also scaled down monumental and other finished works for editions of collectors' bronzes, allowing works by Daniel Chester French, Henry Augustus Lukeman 〔American Archives, Smithsonian〕 and Augustus Saint-Gaudens to ornament a private library or drawing room.
From 1898, Frederic Remington worked exclusively with Roman Bronze Works, as did Charles M. Russell. Remington bronzes were being cast by Roman Bronze Works as late as the 1980s.〔Rita Reif.〕
Roman Bronze Works was purchased in 1946 by Salvatore Schiavo, whose father had worked at the foundry since 1902. His nephew, Philip J. Schiavo, the grandson of the first Schiavo, was the president of the foundry until its closing.〔
The Heisman Trophy was originally made by Dieges & Clust in New York (and later Providence, Rhode Island) from its inception in 1935 until 1980, when Dieges and Clust was sold to Herff Jones. However, for a time until at least 2008, the Roman Bronze Works cast the Heisman Trophy statues awarded annually to the best college football player and his university.
After the foundry closed, original plaster models of major works by American artists Frederic Remington, Daniel Chester French, Charles Russell, Bessie Potter Vonnoh and Anna Hyatt Huntington were auctioned off in New York on September 17, 1988.〔(Rita Reif, "Auctions", ''New York Times'', 16 September 1988 ) Accessed 25 September 2008.〕 Some of the molds were moved to warehouses in Copiague, New York, under the aegis of American Art Restoration, Inc.〔(Sculpture.net dialogue )〕
The business archives were preserved and are now at the Amon Carter Museum Library in Fort Worth, Texas.〔(Amon Carter Museum Archives )〕 In 2002, Schiffer Publishing released a book about Roman Bronze Works, ''A Century of American Sculpture; The Roman Bronze Works Foundry'', written by Lucy D. Rosenfeld and based on the firm's ledgers and archival photographs at the museum.
Brian Ramnarine, who worked at Roman Bronze Works and opened his foundry in Queens (Long Island City) NY under the name ''Empire Bronze Art Foundry'', was charged in Manhattan Federal Court in November 2012 with an $11 million scheme to sell an unauthorized casting of a work by Jasper Johns. He was arraigned in October 2002 on charges of grand larceny, falsifying business records, scheme to defraud and criminal simulation. In February 2003 he pled guilty to making unauthorized copies of sculptures, agreeing to pay $100,000 in restitution.
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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