Talk:Vincent Glinsky

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moved uncited CV laundry list off main space[edit]

Moved uncited CV laundry list off main space. WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 16:02, 25 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Exhibitions[edit]

(Partial listing)

  • Architectural League:

1926; 1932; 1944; 1946; 1954; 1955

  • Whitney Museum:

1936; 1938; 1940; 1944; 1947

  • Brooklyn Museum of Art:

1930; 1933; 1938

  • Metropolitan Museum of Art:

1942

  • Museum of Modern Art:

1930

  • Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts:

1931; 1936; 1939; 1945 (twice); 1947 (twice); 1948

  • Art Institute of Chicago:

1930; 1931; 1932–33; 1936; 1938

  • National Academy of Design:

1947; 1948; 1950

  • Audubon Artists:

1945; 1946 (twice); 1947; 1948; 1960; 1961

  • Galerie Zak:

1929 (twice: solo show and group show)

  • Les Salon des Tuileries:

1930

  • Galerie de la Renaissance:

1932

  • National Sculpture Society:

1932; 1940; 1948; 1950; 1952; 1974; 1975

  • Philadelphia Museum of Art:

1940; 1949 (3rd Sculpture International);

  • Sculptors Guild:

1938; 1939;

  • Solo Shows:

Galerie Zak, 1929; Fifty-Sixth Street Galleries, 1930; Wellons Gallery, 1957; Sculpture Center, 1975

Architectural Sculpture Projects[edit]

  • 1923–24—Ford Motor Company, Detroit, MI; Decorative Keystone Models; collaborating with architect Albert Kahn
  • 1924—Heads, Spanish motif, exterior sculptural decorations on Coney Island Hotel ("Half Moon Hotel")
  • 1925—Maccabees Building, Detroit, MI: two cornice Models, interior sculpture decorations for bronze doors and decorations; model for six-foot American Eagle for Keystone; collaborating with architect Albert Kahn
  • 1925—New Orleans, LA Bank building: 12 Bronze Door Decorative sculpture Panels; collaborating with architect
  • 1927—Fred F. French Building, NYC: entranceway reliefs, bronze elevator doors, lobby letterbox (added to National Register of Historic Places, 2004)
  • 1950—National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD: sculptural panels which traced the history of medicine. After the artist's death, these panels were enlarged and installed on the walls of the lobby.

Commissions / Awards[edit]

  • 1923–24—Ford Motor Company Building, Detroit, MI: decorative keystone models *1924–25—Fred F. French Building (NYC): 19 decorative bronze panels, exterior panels, two sculptural decorations over entrances; letterbox design
  • 1925—Maccabees Building, Detroit, M:; two cornice models; interior sculptural decorations for bronze doors and other decorations; model for 6' eagle for keystone *1925—First National Bank of Commerce, New Orleans, LA: 12 decorative sculpture panels for bronze elevator doors
  • 1930—Rutgers University/NJ College for Women: Portrait of James Nelson
  • 1935—John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship: Creative Sculpture
  • 1936—Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts: George D. Widener Gold Medal
  • 1938—U.S. Navy: Expeditionary Medal
  • 1938—U.S. Post Office, Union City, PA: Mahogany bas-relief
  • 1939—U.S. Post Office, Weirton, West Va: Cast stone bas-relief
  • 1940—U.S. Post Office, Hudson, NY: Cast Stone bas-relief panels
  • 1941—U.S. Navy: Vice Admiral Adolphus Andrews Sr., portrait bust (at Naval Historical Center)
  • 1945—American Academy of Arts and Letters and National Institute of Arts and Letters: Grant
  • 1947—Brookgreen Gardens, SC: "Awakening" in Tennessee Marble, 5' long
  • 1948—Herbert M. Howe Memorial Prize, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts *1948—Golden Anniversary of the City of New York: Citation in Medal Competition
  • 1951—National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD: eight aluminum panels for elevator door decorations (posthumous expanded versions in lobby added later)
  • 1951—New York Board of Education: Commemorative Plaque
  • 1954—Architectural League of New York: National Gold Medal Exhibition Honorable Mention
  • 1955—Shell Oil Company: Carol Lane Safety Award Sculpture
  • 1956—Sun and Surf Beach Club, Atlantic Beach, NY: Wall reliefs, wire mobile decorations
  • 1956—Adelphi College: Trophy Competition, First Prize
  • 1956—Architectural League of NY: Henry O. Avery Award for small sculpture
  • 1958—National Arts Club: Medal of Honor
  • 1960—St. Paul's College, Washington, D.C.: Our Lady of Lourdes Shrine (Limestone, 8' high, for garden)
  • 1963—George Washington Memorial Park (formerly "All Faiths Memorial Tower"), Paramus, NJ: Bronze wall relief fountain, "The Waters of Life."
  • 1963—U.S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C.: Portrait head of Eleanor Roosevelt. Copies went to Wiltwyck School for Boys, NY; Roosevelt House, Hunter College, NY *1965—James A. Farley: Portrait head 1967—NYU Hall of Fame for Great Americans: portrait of Wilbur Wright, aviation pioneer
  • 1967—Audubon Artists: Silver Anniversary Medal
  • 1967—National Sculpture Society: Gold Medal
  • 1968—National Commemorative Society: Theodore Roosevelt coin-medal
  • 1968—National Sculpture Society: C. Percival Dietsch Prize
  • 1970—National Academy of Design: Ellin P. Speyer Prize
  • 1972—National Sculpture Society: Bronze Medal
  • 1975—Tupperware World Headquarters, Orlando, FL: "Seal" in Carrara Marble, 6' high for outdoor pool. Dedicated posthumously