Belle Kinney Scholz

American sculptor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Belle Marshall Kinney Scholz (1890–1959) was an American sculptor, born in Tennessee who worked and died in New York state.

Born
Belle Marshall Kinney

1890
Nashville, Tennessee
Died1959 (aged 6869)
AlmamaterArt Institute of Chicago
Knownforsculpture
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Belle Kinney Scholz
Born
Belle Marshall Kinney

1890
Nashville, Tennessee
Died1959 (aged 6869)
Alma materArt Institute of Chicago
Known forsculpture
SpouseLeopold Scholz
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Early life

Belle Kinney was one of four children born to Captain D.C. Kenny and Elizabeth Morrison Kenny. She was born in Nashville, Tennessee.[1] During the 1897 Tennessee Centennial Exposition, she won a special award for modelling in clay for a bust of her father displayed in the Children's Building.[2]

Sculpting career

Belle Kinney (ca. 1911)

At age 15, Belle Kinney was awarded a scholarship to the Art Institute of Chicago, where she studied with Lorado Taft. In 1907, at age 17, she received her first commission, to sculpt the statue of Jere Baxter, organizer of the Tennessee Central Railway. Following her work at the Art Institute, Kinney maintained a studio in Greenwich Village, during which time she met Austrian-born sculptor Leopold F. Scholz (1877–1946).[3] They married in 1921, and completed several other works together, including the Victory statue in the War Memorial Building court at Legislative Plaza, Nashville (1929) and the bronze figure of Victory for the World War I Memorial in Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York City (1933). They also created both works representing Tennessee in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the US Capitol in Washington D.C.[4]

By 1948, Kinney was maintaining a studio in Chattanooga, Tennessee.[5] Kinney[6] died on August 27 or 28,[7] 1959 at age 69 in Boiceville, Ulster County, New York.[8]

Work

Andrew Jackson (1927) and John Sevier (1931) at the U.S. Capitol, executed with Leopold Scholz

References

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