Archive for March, 2006

His Facility with Clay Made Him a Local Phenomenon

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

In his book, Modern Art: The Men, The Movements, The Meaning, Thomas Craven writes that George “passed his boyhood in the backwoods of Iowa, collecting birds and animals, and to preserve his specimens, stretched their skins over clay models. His facility with clay made him a local phenomenon, and when, at the age of thirteen, […]

Barnard Family Moves to Kankakee, Illinois

Sunday, March 5th, 2006

A newspaper clipping from the Waukesha Plaindealer mentioning George’s father and dated June 20th, 1872 states: “Rev. J. H. Barnard from Kankakee, Ill. [map], came here on Tuesday last to exercise one of his official duties. We are glad to see his genial face again among us.”
In the 1880 U.S. Federal Census, GGB’s sister, Mattie […]

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This site was developed to highlight George Grey Barnard's contribution to the art world, and to explore the people and places that influenced it. One of the most original sculptors of his day, he gained prominence at the Paris Salon in 1894 with Struggle of the Two Natures.

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