Ulric Stonewall Jackson Dunbar (January 31, 1862 – 1927) was a Washington-based sculptor.
Ulric Stonewall Jackson Dunbar | |
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![]() Ulric Dunbar (right) and Edwin Markham | |
Born | (1862-01-31)January 31, 1862 London, Ontario, Canada |
Died | 1927 (aged 64–65) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Education | Art School of Tornto |
Occupation | Sculptor |
Parent(s) | Alexander Dunbar Susannah Jackson |
Ulric Stonewall Jackson Dunbar was born on January 31, 1862 in London, Ontario, the son of Alexander Dunbar and Susannah Jackson.[1] He attended the Art School of Toronto with his brother Frederick and in around 1880, Ulric Dunbar emigrated from Canada to the United States to pursue a career in sculpting.[2]
After working for five years in Philadelphia,[3] Dunbar moved to Washington, D.C. In 1886, he was commissioned to sculpt a model of Vice President Thomas Hendricks that took some four years to complete and was praised for its "straightforward, sober likeness with a degree of honest naturalism".[4] Dunbar subsequently completed a "first-rate" marble bust of President Martin Van Buren.[3] In his lifetime, Dunbar also sculpted models of Sitting Bull, William Wilson Corcoran, and Frederick Douglass, among many others; more than 150 sculptures are attributed to him. He was awarded a bronze medal at the 1893 World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago and a silver medal at the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.[2] Dunbar served as the secretary of the Society of Washington Artists and counted Rudulph Evans and Louise Kidder Sparrow among his students.[5] Ulric Dunbar died in Washington, D.C. in 1927.[3]
A copy of Dunbar's bust of Thomas Hendricks, formerly in the collection of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, was upon that institution's dissolution transferred to the American University Museum.[6]
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