Cast of an Unidentified Right Hand Grasping a Rod

Hiram Powers, Cast of an Unidentified Right Hand Grasping a Rod, 1863, plaster and string, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase in memory of Ralph Cross Johnson, 1968.155.140
Copied Hiram Powers, Cast of an Unidentified Right Hand Grasping a Rod, 1863, plaster and string, 3 126 344 78 in. (8.917.212.4 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase in memory of Ralph Cross Johnson, 1968.155.140
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Artwork Details

Title
Cast of an Unidentified Right Hand Grasping a Rod
Artist
Studio of Hiram Powers
Date
1863
Location
Not on view
Dimensions
3 126 344 78 in. (8.917.212.4 cm.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase in memory of Ralph Cross Johnson
Mediums
Mediums Description
plaster and string
Classifications
Subjects
  • Figure — fragment — hand
Object Number
1968.155.140

Artwork Description

There are many plaster fragments of anatomical details in the Hiram Powers collection that cannot be identified. These may have been models for the hands and feet of full-size sculptures, such as Left Hand Clutching Scroll, which was a study for the Thomas Jefferson statue that stands in the U.S. Capitol, and Left Hand Pressing Down, which was for the statue Greek Slave. Many pieces were also likely commissioned as individual works. The popularity of Loulie’s Hand, a sculpture based on Powers’s daughter’s hand, may have influenced visitors to request casts of their own children’s and loved one’s hands.