Hardison, Ruth Inge, 1904-2016
Biographical notes:
She was born in Portsmouth, Virginia in 1914. Her family later moved to Brooklyn, New York. Before completing her education, Hardison acted in the Broadway Productions of George Abbott's "Sweet River" and "Country Wife", opposite Ruth Gordon. During her brief career in the theater, she began sculpting as a hobby. When she took part in the yearlong "What A Life" production, she even created a sculpture of its cast, later displayed at the Mansfield Theatre. As a young woman, she studied music and creative writing at Vassar College. She also studied at the Art Students League of New York and Tennessee State University.
Hardison's works largely begin as clay, wax, or plaster molds, and are later cast into cast stone or bronze. Hardison began "Negro Giants in History" (a series of cast iron busts) in 1963. Her first bust in that series was of Harriet Tubman, which measured eight inches in height; she has also created busts of W. E. B. Du Bois, Paul Robeson, George Washington Carver, Frederick Douglass, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Sojourner Truth, and Mary McCleod Bethune, among others. Her bronze Douglass bust, for example, was unveiled at Princeton's Firestone Library in 1983. Other public works include a 7-foot abstract figure called "Jubilee" which stands on the campus of Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, a series of 18 children on an outdoor wall of I.S.74 in Hunts Point in the Bronx, and a five-foot mother and Child given to Mount Sinai Hospital in 1957 in gratitude for their help in delivering her only child, Yolande, in 1954. She also created a series of Ingenious Americans, little known black inventors and other notables commissioned and sold by Old Taylor Whiskey in the late 1960s. The series of nine busts included Benjamin Banneker, Charles Richard Drew, Matthew Henson, Frederick McKinley Jones, Lewis Latimer, Garrett Morgan, Norbert Rillieux, Dr. Daniel Hale Williams and Granville Woods.
At auction, her sculptures have earned more than $1300 apiece. In 1990 New York's Governor Mario Cuomo presented Hardison's 1990 two-foot sculpture of Sojourner Truth to Nelson Mandela on behalf of the people of New York State. Reflecting on her work, Hardison once said: "During my long life I have enjoyed using different ways to distill the essences of my experiences so as to share for the good they might do in the lives of others."
Links to collections
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Information
Subjects:
- African American artists
- African American sculptors
- African American women artists
Occupations:
- Actress
- Artist
- Photographer
- Poet
- Sculptor
Places:
- VA, US
- NY, US
- NY, US