In 1887 the prestigious New York firm of McKim, Mead, and White was chosen to design Boston's new library. In 1888, Charles Follen McKim proposed a Renaissance style design based on the Bibliothèque Ste-Geneviève in Paris. The trustees of the library approved, and construction commenced.
The library is in Back Bay on Copley Square, the prominent corner of Boylston Street and Dartmouth Street, opposite Richardson's Trinity Church.
Two allegorical statues by Bela Pratt were installed in 1912 and frame the entrance to the library, representing Science (above, holding a globe) and Art (holding a palette and brush).
Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Sculptor Domingo Mora carved the head of Minerva, goddess of wisdom, below the library’s motto: FREE TO ALL.
Artist John Singer Sargent spent 29 years of his career adorning this hall on the third floor of the McKim Building between 1890 and 1919. Sargent's theme, Triumph of Religion, incorporates a broad range of moments and iconography from early Egyptian and Assyrian belief systems, Judaism, and Christianity.
4 comments:
Another Wow post, Jack.
What a wonderful library!
Thanks for this. It's cheering in this day and age.
I have always been impressed by these old libraries. The buildings are beautiful and the distribution of free knowledge is wonderful.
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