William Wetmore Story

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William Wetmore Story (Wetmore)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Salem, Essex, Massachusetts
Death: October 07, 1895 (76)
Vallombrosa, Italy
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph Story, Associate Justice, U.S. Supr. Court and Sarah Waldo Story
Husband of Emelyn Story
Father of Marchesa Edith Marion Peruzzi di Medici; Thomas Waldo Story and Julian Russell Story
Brother of Mary Oliver Story; Mary Story; Joseph Story; Caroline Story; Caroline Story and 1 other

Managed by: Dr. R. Owen Wyant, (PhD)
Last Updated:

About William Wetmore Story

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wetmore_Story

William Wetmore Story (February 12, 1819 - October 7, 1895) was an American sculptor, art critic, poet and editor.

Biography

William Wetmore Story was the son of jurist Joseph Story and Sarah Waldo (Wetmore) Story. He graduated at Harvard College in 1838 and at the Harvard Law School in 1840, continued his law studies under his father, was admitted to the Massachusetts bar, and prepared two legal treatises of value — Treatise on the Law of Contracts not under Seal (2 vols., 1844) and Treatise on the Law of Sales of Personal Property (1847).

Abandoning the law, he devoted himself to sculpture, and after 1850 lived in Rome, whither he had first gone in 1848, and where he was intimate with the Brownings and with Walter Savage Landor. In 1856, he received a commission for a bust of his late father, which resides in the Memorial Hall/Lowell Hall. Story's apartment, in Palazzo Barberini, became a central location for Americans in Rome. His most famous work, Cleopatra, (1858) was described and admired in Nathaniel Hawthorne's romance, The Marble Faun, and is on display at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia. Another work, the Angel of Grief, has been replicated near the Stanford Mausoleum at Stanford University.

During the American Civil War his letters to the Daily News in December 1861 (afterwards published as a pamphlet, “The American Question,” i.e. of neutrality), and his articles in Blackwood's, had considerable influence on English opinion.

Story submitted a design for the Washington Monument, then under construction. Although the Washington National Monument Society concluded that his design seemed "vastly superior in artistic taste and beauty" to the obelisk already under construction, the obelisk continued to be built, and is what we see today as the monument. In addition, Story sculpted a bronze statue of Joseph Henry on the Mall in Washington, D.C., the scientist who served as the Smithsonian Institution's first Secretary. His Libyan Sibyl is on display at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art.

Story died at Vallombroso, Italy. He is buried with his wife, Emelyn Story, in the Protestant Cemetery, Rome, under a statue of his own design (Angel of Grief).

Family

His children also pursued artistic careers: Thomas Waldo Story (1855–1915) became a sculptor, Julian Russell Story (1857–1919) was a successful portrait painter, and Edith Marion (1844–1907), the marchesa Peruzzi de' Medici, became a writer.

Selected works

Joseph Henry Memorial, Washington D.C., 1883

John Marshall Memorial, Washington D.C., 1884

Angel of Grief (this statue was on the Once album cover of Nightwish, as well as on the covers of works by other bands)

Statue of Joseph Story, his father, in Harvard Law School's Langdell Hall

Selected writings

Life and Letters of Joseph Story, 1851

Roba di Roma, London, 1863

Proportions of the Human Figure, London, 1864

Fiammetta, 1885 (a novel)

Conversations in a Studio, Boston, 1890

Excursions in Art and Letters, Boston, 1891

His poems were collected in two volumes in 1885. Among the longer are “A Roman Lawyer in Jerusalem” (a rehabilitation of Judas Iscariot), “A Jewish Rabbi in Rome,” “The Tragedy of Nero” and “Ginevra di Siena.” The last named, with “Cleopatra,” was included in his Graffiti d'Italia, a collection published in 1868.

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William Wetmore Story's Timeline

1819
February 12, 1819
Salem, Essex, Massachusetts
1844
1844
1855
1855
1857
1857
Walton on Thames, UK
1895
October 7, 1895
Age 76
Vallombrosa, Italy