Group of Deer

Paul Manship, Group of Deer, 1941, bronze, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1963.14.2
Copied Paul Manship, Group of Deer, 1941, bronze, 32 1227 1219 in. (82.669.848.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1963.14.2

Artwork Details

Title
Group of Deer
Artist
Date
1941
Dimensions
32 1227 1219 in. (82.669.848.2 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of the artist
Mediums
Mediums Description
bronze
Classifications
Subjects
  • Animal — deer
Object Number
1963.14.2

Artwork Description

In 1926, Paul Manship was commissioned to build the Paul J. Rainey Memorial Gateway at the Bronx Zoo. The double gates stand over thirty-four feet high and forty-two feet wide, cost $250,000 to create, and took almost fifteen years to complete. Above the right gate, Manship modeled a group of deer. When the gates were complete, he issued independent casts of these sculptures to recoup some of the gateway’s enormous costs. Group of Deer is one of these casts and is less than half the size of the original. Manship maintained the deer’s poses but moved the animals from a profile to a frontal composition, making them appear more lifelike, as if they could be a family in nature. Manship carefully studied deer and made a number of sketches from life. He tried to capture different qualities in each sculpture, endowing the stag with a sense of elegance, the doe with a gentle character, and the faun with a sense of fragility.