Eugene Daub (sculptor): Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Pat Palmer
(→‎Image gallery: adding the Montana statehouse bas relief)
imported>Pat Palmer
mNo edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
| {{Image|Pa cshannon 1 eugene daub.jpg|left|150px|Life-sized bust of Claude Shannon by Eugene Daub, located in Gaylord, MI.  At least six versions of this bust are on display at various institutions in the USA.}}
| {{Image|Pa cshannon 1 eugene daub.jpg|left|150px|Life-sized bust of Claude Shannon by Eugene Daub, located in Gaylord, MI.  At least six versions of this bust are on display at various institutions in the USA.}}
| {{Image|Bell Labs 2017 Murray Hill NJ.jpg|left|150px|One of at least six of Eugene Daub's sculpture of Claude Shannon.  This one stands at entrance of Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ.}}
| {{Image|Bell Labs 2017 Murray Hill NJ.jpg|left|150px|One of at least six of Eugene Daub's sculpture of Claude Shannon.  This one stands at entrance of Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ.}}
| {{Image|MK01785 Montana State Capitol Senate.jpg|left|150px|Lewis & Clark bas relief by Eugene Daub in Montana Senate chamber (over Speaker's podium), Helena, MT.}}
|  
|  
|-
| {{Image|3. Montana Capital relief .jpg|right|350px|This bronze bas relief by Eugene Daub is 96" x 204" and is called "We Proceeded On".  It was installed in the Montana senate chamber in 2006. It depicts the 1805 expedition at the High Cliffs area east of Great Falls of the Columbia River. At the panel's center is Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who acted as interpreter for the expedition. The sculpture was co-sponsored by the Montana Historical Society and the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commission. Mr. Daub was commissioned for the work after a nation-wide competition.}}
| {{Image|3. Montana Capital relief .jpg|right|350px|This bronze bas relief by Eugene Daub is 96" x 204" and is called "We Proceeded On".  It was installed in the Montana senate chamber in 2006. It depicts the 1805 expedition at the High Cliffs area east of Great Falls of the Columbia River. At the panel's center is Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who acted as interpreter for the expedition. The sculpture was co-sponsored by the Montana Historical Society and the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commission. Mr. Daub was commissioned for the work after a nation-wide competition.}}
|-
| {{Image|MK01785 Montana State Capitol Senate.jpg|left|150px|Lewis & Clark bas relief by Eugene Daub in Montana Senate chamber (over Speaker's podium), Helena, MT.}}
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  

Revision as of 10:42, 20 February 2021

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.


Eugene Daub ((1942-?) is an American scultor known for busts in a classical style. He created a life-size sculture (from the waist up) of Claude Shannon which stands in a half dozen locations around the USA. Daub studied at University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Academy for the Fine Arts, and Alfred University in New York, won the Arthur Ross Award from the Institute of Classical Architecture and Classical America, and has received awards in figurative and bas-relief sculpture from the American Numismatic Society and the American Numismatic Association. Daub's work can be found in the British Museum and the Smithsonian Institution, various universities, private industry, several U.S.A. state capitals, and the National Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capital building in Washington, D.C.

Image gallery

These will be placed later

Life-sized bust of Claude Shannon by Eugene Daub, located in Gaylord, MI. At least six versions of this bust are on display at various institutions in the USA.
File:Bell Labs 2017 Murray Hill NJ.jpg
One of at least six of Eugene Daub's sculpture of Claude Shannon. This one stands at entrance of Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ.
   
This bronze bas relief by Eugene Daub is 96" x 204" and is called "We Proceeded On". It was installed in the Montana senate chamber in 2006. It depicts the 1805 expedition at the High Cliffs area east of Great Falls of the Columbia River. At the panel's center is Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who acted as interpreter for the expedition. The sculpture was co-sponsored by the Montana Historical Society and the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commission. Mr. Daub was commissioned for the work after a nation-wide competition.
Lewis & Clark bas relief by Eugene Daub in Montana Senate chamber (over Speaker's podium), Helena, MT.