Eleanor Platt
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Eleanor Platt | |
|---|---|
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| Born | 1910 |
| Died | 1974 |
| Occupation | Sculptor, artist |
| Awards |
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Eleanor Platt (1910–1974)[1] was an American sculptor. She was known for her bronze or plaster busts often of members of the government, especially the judiciary. In 1945 she was named a Guggenheim Fellow.
Early years and background
Eleanor Platt was one of the foremost classical American sculptors of the 20th Century. Her works are included in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Portrait Gallery, the Hall of Great Americans at New York University, as well as in other museums, universities, and government buildings throughout the country. Platt was a portraitist, sculpting busts and commemorative medals of many important historical figures of the 19th and 20th centuries, especially within the judiciary and government. Throughout her prolific career she sculpted over 40 busts, 10 bas-reliefs, and 30 medals, while serving important positions within the arts community. Sculpting was Platt's only career, she made a fully independent living from her art. This was especially impressive considering she graduated from art school in the middle of the Great Depression. She quickly made a name for herself with her early works of Learned Hand, John Flanagan, and Arthur Lee. Her career spanned almost five decades. Platt acted as her own business agent negotiating all aspects of her work including materials, contracts, casting, proofs, photography, shipping arrangements, and communications with her customers.[2] She kept her own studio/apartment in Manhattan for many years and refused to leave when the neighborhood declined because she said she loved the natural light in her studio. She sculpted her portraits from both sittings and photographs.
Platt married Charles J. Flavin in 1944, divorced, and then married Victor Russo until his death in 1957.[3]
Eleanor Platt was born in Woodbridge, New Jersey in 1910 to George Gilbert Platt Jr. and Eva (Smith) Platt. Platt had three older siblings: Howard, Florence, and Lester. Being the youngest child earned her the family nickname Babe, which stayed with her throughout her life.
Education
Platt studied exclusively with the Norwegian-born sculptor Arthur Lee,[4] and Edward McCarten from 1929 to 1933 at the Art Students League of New York.[3] In 1934 she finished her formal education at the Continuation School in New York City. In 1940 she received the Chaloner Prize. In 1944 she was granted $1,000 from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and in 1945 she was named a Guggenheim Fellow.
Death
Platt was found dead in her studio at the Park Plaza Hotel on West 77th Street in New York City on August 30, 1974. Her death was initially ascribed to heart failure,[5] but it was later determined that she was killed by Calvin Jackson, a serial killer who had murdered eight other women, most in the Park Plaza where he also lived.[6] She was survived by her mother, a sister, and a brother.[3]
