Artist

Abastenia St. Léger Eberle

born Webster City, IA 1878-died New York City 1942
Also known as
  • Abastenia St. Leger Eberle
  • Mary Abastenia St. Leger Eberle
Born
Webster City, Iowa, United States
Died
New York, New York, United States
Biography

Abastenia St. Léger Eberle grew up in the Midwest and later moved to New York City, where she studied at the Art Students League. She received immediate recognition for her bronze sculptures and, like many artists at the turn of the twentieth century, found inspiration in New York's urban communities. She depicted immigrant women and children at work and at play in the Lower East Side, Woodstock, and West Village, all neighborhoods and tenements that Eberle herself inhabited. Women's issues dominated her artwork and personal politics, and in 1915 she organized an exhibition of female artists at the Macbeth Gallery to raise money for woman suffrage. Eberle later developed a heart condition that limited her work, but she remained a member of many art organizations and donated twenty-one sculptures to her hometown, Webster City, Iowa.

Works by this artist (744 items)

William Zorach, Head of Eudora, ca. 1960, cast and painted plaster on wood base, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift from the collection of the Zorach children, 1976.145.47
Head of Eudora
Dateca. 1960
cast and painted plaster on wood base
On view
William Zorach, Study for Head of Moses, ca. 1950, unfired ceramic, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Tessim Zorach and Dahlov Ipcar, 1968.154.161
Study for Head of Moses
Dateca. 1950
unfired ceramic
On view
William Zorach, Mother and Child (study), ca. 1926, plaster, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Tessim Zorach and Dahlov Ipcar, 1968.154.153
Mother and Child (study)
Dateca. 1926
plaster
On view

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