Sarah Fisher Ames Explained

Sarah Fisher Ames
Birth Name:Sarah Fisher Clampitt
Birth Place:Lewes, Delaware, USA
Death Place:Washington, D.C., USA
Known For:Sculpture
Spouse:Joseph Alexander Ames

Sarah Fisher Ames (1817–1901) was an American sculptor,[1] best known for a bust of Abraham Lincoln that she produced in 1866.

Biography

Sarah Fisher Clampitt was born in 1817 in Lewes, Delaware. she studied art in Boston and in Rome, and married Joseph Alexander Ames, a portrait painter,[2] in 1845. While in Boston, she may have attended "Conversations" hosted by women's activist Margaret Fuller.[3] The couple spent time in Rome, where Sarah Ames studied Italian sculpture. Little else is known about her early life.

She produced sculptures of notable Americans, including C. T. Brooks (1858), John Andrew (1867), Ulysses S. Grant (1968), Anson Burlingame, Ross Winans,[4] and at least five busts of Abraham Lincoln.[5] During the American Civil War, Ames worked as a volunteer nurse, rising to direct the hospital situated in the U.S. Capitol. She was a good friend of Lincoln, either through her position at the hospital or the antislavery movement. Rufus Wilson, author of Lincoln in Portraiture, claimed that Ames knew Lincoln "in an intimate and friendly way" through her work at the hospital.[6]

Ames was one of the first sculptors of Lincoln. By 1865, she had created a plaster bust of Lincoln, which she received a patent for, and sold plaster replications of. In 1866 or 1868 Ames was commissioned to create a marble bust of Lincoln by the U.S. Congress.[7] In 1868, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts exhibited the bust. Her work has been compared to the Lincoln bust produced around the same time by Vinnie Ream. Her 1866 bust of Lincoln is held in the U.S. Capitol Building. Her busts of Lincoln are also located at the Massachusetts State House, the Williams College Museum of Art, the Lynn Historical Society, and the Woodmere Art Museum.

Ames exhibited her work at The Woman's Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois.[8]

She died in Washington, D.C., in 1901.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sarah Fisher Ames . ArtNet . 22 December 2018.
  2. Web site: Ames, Sarah Fisher . Woodmere Art Museum . 22 December 2018 . en-gb.
  3. Dabakis, Melissa. A Sisterhood of Sculptors: American Artists in Nineteenth-Century Rome (Penn State Press, 2020).
  4. Book: Skvarla, Diane K. . United States Senate Catalogue of Fine Art . 2005 . Government Printing Office . 258 . en.
  5. Web site: U.S. Senate: Abraham Lincoln . United States Senate . 22 December 2018.
  6. Book: Wilson . Rufus Rockwell . Lincoln in portraiture . 1935 . New York, The Press of the Pioneers, Inc. . 178 .
  7. Dabakis . Melissa . Sculpting Lincoln: Vinnie Ream, Sarah Fisher Ames, and the Equal Rights Movement . www.journals.uchicago.edu . Spring 2008 . 22 . 1 . 10.1086/587917 . 191491370 .
  8. Web site: Nichols . K. L. . Women's Art at the World's Columbian Fair & Exposition, Chicago 1893. 22 December 2018.