翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Temple Ewell Preceptory
・ Temple F (Selinus)
・ Temple F. Smith
・ Temple Fade (hairstyle)
・ Temple Festivals of Kerala
・ Temple Fielding
・ Temple Footbridge
・ Temple for Peace
・ Temple for Performing Arts
・ Temple Fortune
・ Temple Freda (Bryan, Texas)
・ Temple Gardens Mineral Spa Resort
・ Temple garment
・ Temple Gate Polytechnic
・ Temple Glacier
Temple Gold Medal
・ Temple Golf Club
・ Temple Grafton
・ Temple Grandin
・ Temple Grandin (film)
・ Temple Grove School
・ Temple Guiting Preceptory
・ Temple Hall
・ Temple Hall, Jamaica
・ Temple Hamlyn
・ Temple Hardy
・ Temple Hauptfleisch
・ Temple Hayes
・ Temple Heights Christian School
・ Temple Herdewyke


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Temple Gold Medal : ウィキペディア英語版
Temple Gold Medal
Joseph E. Temple Fund Gold Medal (defunct) was a prestigious art prize awarded for the best oil painting by an American artist submitted to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts's annual exhibition. Temple medals were awarded most years from 1883 to 1968. Recipients included James Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri and Edward Hopper.
==History==
The medal was named for Philadelphia merchant Joseph E. Temple (1811–1880), a patron of the arts and PAFA Board member, whose bequest of $51,000 funded the awards.
Any American artist was welcome to submit works for PAFA's annual exhibitions. Juries in painting and sculpture, composed of PAFA faculty and invited artists, evaluated hundreds (and later thousands) of submissions and chose those for exhibition. The Painters' Jury of Selection also chose the medal winners in painting. An artist could be awarded a Temple medal only once.
In 1883, the first year of the Temple medals, the jury could not agree on a gold medal recipient. A silver medal would have been awarded to William B. T. Trego for ''The March to Valley Forge'', but he refused to accept it. Trego argued that if only one Temple medal was awarded it should be a gold, not a silver (which implied second place).〔("Fifty-Fifth Exhibition at the Pennsylvania Academy," ) ''American Architect and Building News'', December 13, 1884.〕
From 1884 to 1889, a gold medal was awarded for the best figure painting and a silver medal for the best landscape or marine painting. But the jury ignored the rules in 1890, awarding a landscape-with-cattle painting the gold medal. In 1891 and 1892, a gold medal was awarded for the best painting regardless of subject, and a silver for the second-best. No second-place medals were awarded after 1892. From 1893 to 1899, two gold medals were awarded each year. Beginning in 1900, a single gold medal was awarded for the best painting in the annual exhibition regardless of subject.〔("Honors Awarded by the Temple Fund," ) ''Catalogue of the Annual Exhibition'', (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1919), pp. 8-9.〕
Sometimes the medal-winning painting was purchased for PAFA's collection. Unlike many art awards, a Temple medal was not accompanied by a cash prize.
Famously, Thomas Eakins, who had been forced to resign as director of PAFA's school in 1886, accepted his 1904 award by declaring, ”I think you’ve got a heap of impudence to give me a medal." He then rode off on a bicycle to the Philadelphia Mint, where he sold the gold medal for its melt-down value.〔("Biography of Thomas Eakins," ) Philadelphia Museum of Art.〕
William Glackens wryly changed the name of the figure painting that won him the 1924 award to ''The Temple Gold Medal Nude''.〔(Temple Gold Medal Nude ), from Sotheby's NY.〕
By the 1930s, PAFA's annual exhibitions had acquired a reputation for being parochial and nepotistic. With the costs of transporting and insuring the works, they were also expensive. Beginning in 1954, the exhibitions became bi-annual. The last Temple Gold Medal was awarded to Helen Frankenthaler in 1968, the same year that PAFA's exhibitions ended.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Temple Gold Medal」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.